For their 17th century America’s evangelization work, the Jesuit fathers used in situ graphic expressions at 1:1 scale. Since 1915, architect Juan Kronfuss [Córdoba, Arg.] showed on paper the so-called Argentine colonial architecture – strictly speaking, Spanish vice-royal architecture. From his chair at the university, he mirrored Jesuit buildings in excellent hand produced ink drawings. One by one Jesuit estancias, and other buildings in Buenos Aires and Salta, were recorded by his pen. His work allowed to incorporate assets in the region within heritage listings; some degraded. He thus prevented further deterioration and encouraged the authorities to set up a heritage corpus within a framework of protection legislation. From those drawings, advanced methods and technology would enable approaching neo-Andalusian heritage [Cordoba, Argentina] with greater precision. We explore advances in the field of graphic representation following those origins, identifying the applications potential in this area that would allow: territorial planning - GIS, drones; conservation programs - HBIM, monitoring of aggressive agents; reactivation - augmented reality. Likewise, actions in associated regions.
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