Quantifying Housekeeping Challenge and Conservation Need

Author:

Lloyd Helen12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Trusted Conservators, London SW11 5SB, UK

2. Formerly National Trust, Heelis, Kemble Drive, Swindon SN2 2NA, UK

Abstract

This simple model, developed by conservators, assists in the challenge of making preventive conservation, housekeeping, and care of historic interiors and collections, physically and economically sustainable, in historic houses welcoming increasing volumes of visitors (a primary source of dust). It introduces objectivity into conservation advice and management decisions: how many collections care staff should each historic house ideally employ, and how large an annual budget is required to fund the non-wage costs of routine preventive and interventive conservation? Are staffing structures rational and consistent, and tailored to the individual and developing circumstances of multiple properties? Eight qualitative and quantitative criteria are each given a score from 1–4 in relation to their data ranges. The total scores for each property are converted to percentages, correlated with staffing structures, and used to estimate the requirements for daily, weekly and annual housekeeping and conservation cleaning. Selected data are used to measure housekeeping performance against weekly targets, and to rationalize the distribution of financial resources for preventive conservation and maintenance. The model can be adapted for use in any museum or heritage building which needs to assess and quantify the routine care of interiors and collections on open display to visitors.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Materials Science (miscellaneous),Archeology,Conservation

Reference39 articles.

1. Sandwith, H., and Stainton, S. (1984). The National Trust Manual of Housekeeping, Allen Lane.

2. (2023, April 08). Ten Agents of Deterioration. Available online: https://www.canada.ca/en/conservation-institute/services/agents-deterioration/physical-forces.html.

3. (2023, January 22). Framework for Preserving Heritage Collections. Available online: https://publications.gc.ca/collections/collection_2021/pch/CH57-4-29-2021-eng.pdf.

4. National Trust (2011). National Trust Manual of Housekeeping, Care and Conservation of Collections in Historic Houses, The National Trust. [revised ed.].

5. Lloyd, H.M., and Brimblecombe, P. (2005). Controls on Irreversible Soiling, 2000–2003, The Leverhulme Trust.

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