| Presenting Lithos | The association |

Presenting Lithos

The value of techniques inherited from our ancestors: the art of dry-stone walling
The heritage of dry-stone stems from extraordinary expertise and retains all of its relevance still today. Along with its partner organisations, the objective of the Dry-Stone Centre is to obtain recognition and appreciation for old techniques and traditional craft as being relevant today. The Dry-Stone Centre has set up professional training opportunities, rooted in the landscape, thanks to training work-sites that take account of local constraints. The Centre tries to encourage local building companies and potential architects or project-managers to use dry-stone techniques.

Dry-stone: a strong marker of regional identity région
Dry-stone represents a lived-in landscape, a shared cultural trait for numerous rural communities and regions, particularly in the Mediterranean region. The Dry-stone Centre has given itself the objective of raising public awareness of the value of this common heritage by supporting public and private/voluntary initiatives, offering training resources as well as technical assistance to managers and promoters of private and public conservation projects.


A precious resource in terms of ecology, landscape and economy
Dry-stone features represent an ecological asset that contributes to the equilibrium and quality of the environment, particularly in terms of preventing erosion and limiting the devastating effects of flooding. The landscapes that are shaped in part by dry-stone techniques play a major role in the reputation of a geographical region. They contribute to the value of agricultural production, cultural tourism and economic attractiveness. They provide a renewed base for employment, with a professional network that includes stone-cutters, skilled wallers and project leaders.
The dry-stone centre provides a federating framework for development initiatives that add value to the environment. Its objective is to support efforts like the “Dry-Stone Discovery Route” through Provence, a project originally promoted by the APARE.


Dry-stone: creating regional unity
From Lebanon to Andalusia, from Morocco to the Cyclades, from Brittany to Scotland, dry-stone unites territories and people. Pooling knowledge and techniques, their shared experience turns dry-stone walling into a theme of cooperation in the areas of culture, the environment and the economy. This is one of the missions of the agora made up of Lithos participants, together with the many international partnerships that are already working together on common projects. This is how participants from Cyprus, Scotland, Provence, Greece and the Balearic Islands came together for the “European Dry-Stone Forum” with the assistance of the Centre Méditerranéen de l’Environnement (CME) in the context of the EU Culture 2000 programme. They drew up a European wallers’ charter.


The Dry-Stone Centre: at the head of a network of dry-stone countries
The Dry-Stone Centre in Le Beaucet has made several tools available to professionals as well as the general public: a documentation centre, a setting for exchange and dialogue and a website to help collect and share information through the network of countries concerned by dry-stone.


The association

Objective: Acknowledgment and promotion of dry-stone.

Headquarters : Maison Antonnella 84210 Le Beaucet

The board of administrators:

Président: Jean Cabanel
Treasurer: Jean-Baptiste Lanaspèze
Secretary: Paul Arnaud
First Vice-president: Paul Gilles
Second Vice-president: Yves Marchand
Third Vice-president: Robert Fierret
Administrator: Roger Bouvier
Administrator: Mario Moretti