Digital Construction

Surveying Karl Marx’s grave: Highgate Cemetery goes digital

Highgate Cemetery - west path
The main path through the west side of Highgate Cemetery (image: Highgate Cemetery)
North London's Highgate Cemetery – the final resting place for the likes of Karl Marx, Douglas Adams, George Eliot and Jeremy Beadle – is being captured digitally as part of a 25-year masterplan to preserve the Victorian landmark.

Opened in 1839, Highgate Cemetery went into decline in the 1970s before being rescued by the Friends of Highgate Cemetery Trust. The charity has been focused on reversing nature, clearing access routes and repairing damage to the landscape and to buildings, caused mostly by neglect and self-set trees.

It is now known as Britain’s most popular and best-loved cemetery, with its history, living landscape and biodiverse ecology. The cemetery attracts more than 100,000 visitors a year, the majority of whom pay take part in guided tours to the various buildings, monuments and the most notable graves.

The Trust opened two competitions seeking architects to develop a 25-year masterplan for the long-term care of the site. Gustafson Porter + Bowman and Hopkins Architects won the contracts to deliver the vision of a sanctuary for generations to come, preserving a link from the past to the present.

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