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  1. World Heritage partnerships for conservation. Ensuring that World Heritage sites sustain their outstanding universal value is an increasingly challenging mission in today’s complex world, where sites are vulnerable to the effects of uncontrolled urban development, unsustainable tourism practices, neglect, natural calamities, pollution, political instability, and conflict.

  2. Brief synthesis. The Complex of Hue Monuments is located in and around Hue City in Thua Thien-Hue Province in the geographical centre of Vietnam and with easy access to the sea. Established as the capital of unified Vietnam in 1802 CE, Hue was not only the political but also the cultural and religious centre under the Nguyen Dynasty, the last ...

  3. My Son Sanctuary dates from the 4th to the 13th centuries CE. The property is located in the mountainous border Duy Xuyen District of Quang Nam Province, in central Viet Nam. It is situated within an elevated geological basin surrounded by a ring of mountains, which provides the watershed for the sacred Thu Bon river.

  4. The Complex of Hué Monuments is a unique example of a planned and fully defended feudal capital city in Southeast Asia. Hué was the imperial capital of Vietnam between 1802 and 1945. The site consists of the Capital City, a complex enclosed within defensive walls with the Forbidden Purple City at its heart, and associated monuments outside of ...

  5. 1 de dic. de 2023 · Proudly announce that the first inter-provincial site recognized by UNESCO, Halong Bay, and Cat Ba Archipelago is now the new heritage site in Vietnam. It has been 8 years since Vietnam had a world heritage site recognized by UNESCO. In 2015, Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park was recognized as a World Natural Heritage Site for the second time.

  6. 9 de oct. de 2022 · World Heritage partnerships for conservation. Ensuring that World Heritage sites sustain their outstanding universal value is an increasingly challenging mission in today’s complex world, where sites are vulnerable to the effects of uncontrolled urban development, unsustainable tourism practices, neglect, natural calamities, pollution, political instability, and conflict.

  7. Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park. The Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park, inscribed on the World Heritage List in 2003, covered 85,754 hectares. With this extension, the site covers a total surface area of 123,326 hectares (a 46 % increase) and shares a boundary with the Hin Namno Nature Reserve in the Peoples Democratic Republic of Laos.