| Brief Description:
A national government effort to revive the port city through new investments
in infrastructure threatens the twenty-four elevators (funiculars) that
constitute the defining characteristic of the city as well as one of
Chile’s most important industrial-heritage sites.
Nowhere else in the world do elevators exist in such concentration or
with as broad a cultural and historical significance. The elevators
symbolize Valparaiso’s preeminence as a maritime center, a position
that disappeared after the opening of the Panama Canal in 1914. Because
they are still used to facilitate pedestrian traffic, they foster social
interaction among the inhabitants. Many elevators could be lost forever
due to their advanced state of deterioration. The absence of a plan
unifying community, municipal, and private entities in the effort to
appreciate, conserve, and protect the elevators threatens their survival.
Source: World Monuments Fund |