BELVAU has achieved its research aim and objectives through a twofold approach: the study of contemporary literature and comprehensive fieldwork.
-The study of technical texts (journals, treatises and handbooks) of the 19th and 20th centuries has been fundamental to contextualize the construction of vaults at this time. The abundance of treatises written during this period has helped to understand the construction knowledge and practice at the time, and the similarities and differences with other countries. After the study of the general texts, the case studies were selected, and the research continued with the consultation of the preserved original projects. I found information about the design and construction sequence, materials, working drawings, building specifications, photographs, and data of structural analysis. These sources were located in archives, libraries and research centres.
-Fieldwork has been a fundamental and complementary approach to understand the technical aspects of vaults. Twenty buildings have been visited, photographed and documented. From these, five have been selected for a deeper analysis and have been surveyed with a laser scanner, redrawn as-built and the geometry and construction of the vaults has been analysed.
The development and results of the project have been presented in several scientific events: Interuniversity research seminar Construction History in Belgium (Antwerp, September 2019), XI Congreso Nacional de Historia de la Construcción (Soria, October 2019), 7th Annual Conference on Construction History (online, April 2020), 3rd International Conference “Reconstruction and Restoration of Architectural Heritage” (online, March 2021), Construction History seminar at the Politecnico di Milano (Milan, June 2021) and 7th International Congress on Construction History (online, July 2021). To conclude the 2 years research project an international Symposium on Brick Vaults and Beyond (online, April 2021) has been organized. In this symposium the results of the project were contextualized in a wider framework with the participation of ten international experts, addressing different aspects of the construction of vaults. (see also https://www.vub.be/arch/project/symposiumvaults )
The main results of the project have been published in three papers in conference proceedings mentioned above and two papers in scientific and peer-reviewed journals in the field of construction history and architectural heritage. The editing of the book ‘Brick Vaults and Beyond. The Transformation of a Historical Structural System from 1750 to 1970’ in 2021 can be seen as the closing publication. Besides, the development and results of the project have been shared with stakeholders involved in the conservation and value assessment of architectural heritage.
A part of the dissemination has intended to reach different audiences through different means: collaboration in the publication of the VUB Architectural Engineering Department yearbooks, an international summer school, an evening lecture co-organised with the Brussels agency for architectural heritage urban.brussels and a collaboration in a publication of the series of the Walloon heritage agency Les carnets du patrimoine (éditions AwaP).