AP Valletta and International Team across Accra and London launches publication on heritage regeneration

10 Jul 2024

Valletta Accra, a travelling research project led by AP Valletta (Valletta, Malta), David Kojo Derban (Accra, Ghana), and Ann Dingli (London, UK), launched its culminating publication on the subject of heritage innovation surrounding the port cities of Accra, Ghana and Valletta, Malta, this spring.

Kingsway Store; Jamestown, Accra. 2023 Photo credit: Paul Addo

The publication introduced the full analysis of the research project, tallying with a wider aim to propose versions of heritage regeneration that have been nurtured by close, critical reading of two mercantile, post-colonial built environments.

A travelling research project

Valletta Accra was launched in November 2023 as a travelling research project as part of Art Council Malta’s International Cultural Exchange funding stream. The aim was to study two capitals across two continents, each holding a memory of colonial presence and its wielding of mercantile potential.

The team of researchers approached heritage fabric as a transcript of the evolving urban, social, and economic life of two harbour cities – Accra, the capital of Ghana on the Guinea Coast of West Africa, and Valletta, the capital of Malta, an island in the Mediterranean - both carrying the imprint of their role as adopted trading strongholds.

The comparison of the two cities was positioned as a departure point for a deeper reading of both the colonial and post-colonial experiences. In its parallel observation, Valletta Accra questioned how heritage might develop in line with authentic permeations of identity and urban ambition, positioning contrast as a methodology for revelation.

Valletta Accra: the publication

The project’s resulting publication, launched in April 2024, unfolds in two parts: the first is a collection of four written and photographic essays; the second, is a speculative design proposal for a heritage site – the Osu Salem Presbyterian Primary School – in Osu, Accra.

The goal of the speculative proposal is to restore the school’s building fabric as a significant heritage site in line with the learnings of the wider research project. In doing so, the design project becomes a methodological tugboat for a transferable, scalable heritage regeneration approach based on a hybrid act of looking, learning, and acting directly on what has been jointly discovered. The team is now working to raise funds for the actualization of the design proposal, promoting the revival of the Osu Salem building as a prototype for the wider project’s learnings.

 

Project credits

Project & publication research

AP Valletta (Erica Giusta, Guillaume Dreyfuss, Mireille Tabone), Ann Dingli, Ethnik International (David Kojo Derban)

Publication editor

Ann Dingli

Publication Authors

Erica Giusta, David Kojo Derban, Ann Dingli, Guillaume Dreyfuss

Photography

Paul Addo, Guillaume Dreyfuss, Luis Rodríguez López, Ann Dingli, Erica Giusta

Book Design

Ann Dingli

Project Management

Erica Giusta

Field-trip Coordination

Erica Giusta, David Kojo Derban

Project Curation

Ann Dingli

Fund and Stakeholder Management

Erica Giusta, David Kojo Derban

Osu Salem Design Team

AP Valletta (Erica Giusta, Mireille Tabone, Edward Cuschieri), Ethnik International (David Kojo Derban)

Project funding

Valletta Accra was launched in 2023 as a travelling research project led by AP Valletta, Kojo Derban, and Ann Dingli, supported by the Arts Council Malta’s International Cultural Exchange funding stream.