Our goal is to turn heritage into the hub of the wheel, not to compromise but to prioritise heritage outcomes.

Prioritise don’t Compromise

Our goal is to turn heritage into the hub of the wheel, shifting its management from compromise to prioritise heritage outcomes.

We do this by providing a number of services designed to help you get the most out of heritage practices, whether it be purpose built disaster management or enhanced imaging services to help you get the data you need.

Our Mission Statement

 

Our mission is to create an organization that breaks the mold treating heritage as the hub of the wheel, rather than the after-thought it has traditionally been. Heritage is a difficult space to operate in, now more than ever with countless global issues threatening not only its continued operation, but its very existence.

So our mission is simple, provide as much support and generate as much knowledge as we can to help heritage not only survive, but thrive in unprecedented times. We are doing this with a ground up approach. Laws and regulations will change (eventually) but right now its you, the heritage owners, operators and community organisations who need support. So we are here to lend our knowledge and skills to help bridge the gap between intent and outcome..

Our Founding Team

 

Georgia Walton

Principal Heritage, Disaster, and Conservation Management

My focus is policy, projects and big picture scope. Having studied at the Iron Bridge Institute for Cultural Heritage, I have sought the knowledge and skills neccessary to follow my passion. Protecting Heritage.

I seek to do things differently, to cease reactive management and start proactively managing the challenges we face. With experience across a number of roles in the sector, I know the challenges of change, but I am committed to helping heritage to be everything it could be. Even if we make history to do it.

 

Shane Hermans-Walton

Director of Social Research and Head of Photography

My goal is to utilise photography and criminological research to drive large scale improvement to how we approach the conservation of nature and heritage. In order to do this I have studied a number of academic areas from law enforcement, legal studies, criminology and even forensic mental health; so as to build a multidisciplinary knowledge base and understanding of the ways in which we can change how we interact with conservation efforts.

Photography and imaging play a strong part of this as digital imaging has become a cornerstone of daily life. Not only is imagery entwined with how humanity communicates, but also in the vast ways that we collect data within technical imaging methods. My photography experience has led to publication, and recognition by councils, heritage sites, and within the competition space.