I met with Jessica Reeves of the Metro Historical Commission (MHC) this week. We looked at other municipalities (and one university) that had created “walking tour” type projects based on historical markers. We also discussed how to attach signage to the existing markers that will connect the potential audience to the project via the physical location and physical marker. Jessica and I have also designed a logo, approved by Tim Walker, and are working to have it professionally designed. I am currently using a rough draft of the logo on my current project on Omeka: http://www.drpethel.com/exhibit/
Here are three projects with similarities to the proposed goals and working strategy of Nashville Sites. For some the web presence is great, for others pretty bad. There is an even wider range when considering metadata, scholarship, and sponsors. If anything, these reveal that such projects are desirable but the planning, execution, design/layout (to be mobile and desktop friendly), navigation, and overall usability remain key. Also key is reaching the intended audience.
1) Fort Wayne, Indiana—http://archfw.org/heritagetrail/centraldowntown/
It is managed through a local heritage non-profit. They use WordPress and include audio clips. No meta data.
Article about the project—http://beqrioustracker.com/history-markers-come-alive-with-qr-codes/
2) St. Augustine, Florida— http://staugustineexplorers.com/
This was funded by a state grant and administered by the Planning Department of the city. It had two components: markers and QR codes going up on buildings; and the website that hosts the digital content. The markers are beautiful, the site is…not. No meta data, very hard to navigate.
Article about the project with photos— http://staugustine.com/news/local-news/2016-09-05/added-touch-city-st-augustine-places-historical-marker-qr-code-some
3) University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign— http://publicaffairs.illinois.edu/markerstour/
Funded and managed by the Public Affairs division of the University. The QR codes are attached to the posts in some way (I’m waiting on an email back from Joel Steinfeldt, the social media/site manager who put up the QR codes, to see how they are attached). Site has audio/video clips, no meta data.
Article about the project— https://news.illinois.edu/blog/view/6367/209634
__________________________________________________________________________