Nominate a Site

About the 2025 Watch

The World Monuments Watch is a nomination-based program that connects local heritage preservation to global awareness and action. Every two years, the Watch rallies support to places in need and the people who care for them, spotlighting new challenges and the communities worldwide harnessing heritage to confront the crucial issues of our time. 

At its core, the Watch’s call to action seeks to empower timely preservation efforts that improve the lives of communities. The 2025 Watch will include 25 places, each telling an urgent local story with global relevance. Through this initiative, World Monuments Fund (WMF) partners with the people who know these places best, amplifying their efforts through advocacy, capacity building, and close collaboration with WMF’s expert team and professionals across the globe. 

Community members during the Watch Day celebration at Yanacancha-Huaquis Cultural Landscape, Peru.
Community members during the Watch Day celebration at Yanacancha-Huaquis Cultural Landscape, Peru.

Guidelines

Download the full nomination guidelines in different languages.

Download the full nomination guidelines in 8 languages here: ArabicChineseEnglishFrenchJapanesePortugueseRussian, and Spanish.

The Watch seeks nominations that rank highly according to these criteria: 

  • Cultural significance: How deeply does the nominated place embody, reflect, or relate to the culture or history of a community, country, or region? Can its preservation inspire an appreciation for the richness and diversity of our shared past? 
  •  Relevance to urgent issues: Does the nomination respond to imminent threats or time-sensitive opportunities? Does the nomination have unmistakable ties to salient socio-cultural or environmental issues with global resonance? 
  • Potential for community benefit: How can preserving the nominated site meaningfully benefit communities? Does the nomination show the potential to enhance or enrich the social, cultural, economic, or environmental life of communities or otherwise yield benefits through the preservation process?  
  • Feasibility: Can World Monuments Fund effectively support the nomination with the resources and expertise that we can offer? Are there foreseeable challenges that could impede an impactful collaboration? 

The most competitive nominations for the 2025 Watch will demonstrate a place’s deep importance to the past and present lives of communities and inspire action through relevance to the most pressing issues of our time.

Heritage places of all types and from any time period, ancient to modern, are eligible. They may include archaeological sites, civic buildings, residences, sacred or religious sites, parks, gardens, cultural landscapes, commercial or leisure destinations, engineering or industrial structures, historic city centers, and more. Places do not need to be monumental in the traditional sense but should be significant to our shared human past in some way and have relevance to contemporary societal needs or local community objectives, whether social, cultural, economic, environmental, or otherwise.

If your nomination is selected for inclusion in the 2025 Watch, your efforts will benefit from the following opportunities:  

  • Global press coverage and publicity through a major public announcement and media event, and features in WMF’s events series and media channels; 
  • Consultation with WMF’s team of experts across the two-year Watch cycle to evaluate needs and co-design strategies for advocacy, fundraising, and preservation; 
  • Opportunities to collaborate with leading organizations in storytelling and communications through creative partnerships, as available;  
  • Exclusive membership to the Watch Network, a platform for current and previous successful Watch nominators, WMF associates, and experts worldwide to collaborate, exchange insights, and access resources, events, and expertise; 
  • Financial support for a unique community-based event known as a “Watch Day” celebrating the importance and custodianship of heritage places; 
  • Assistance in developing and implementing a dedicated preservation project, including advocacy campaigns, planning, research, education, and physical interventions in the historic built environment, contingent upon the success of fundraising efforts.

Nominations are free to submit and open to all. We welcome nominations from groups, organizations, and individuals, including those listed below: 


Stewards of community-owned heritage; representatives of civil society organizations; Indigenous groups; heritage professionals; artists and creative professionals; private individuals; activist groups; academics and educational institutions; architecture, art, and design students; government agencies; and more. 

In addition to groups with heritage preservation as their mission, we encourage organizations or individuals in different fields to submit nominations to the Watch and explain how their interests align with the program.  


Successful nominators and World Monuments Fund will work together extensively. Nominators should be prepared to correspond directly with us about the nomination and to serve as the official representative for its inclusion on the 2025 Watch. Successful nominators will be expected to provide frequent updates about the site, facilitate media coverage, promote community engagement, and collaborate with WMF through consultation or, in some instances, project development. 


The endorsement of a site’s legal owner is encouraged but not required. In relevant cases, owners of selected sites will be notified of the site’s inclusion prior to the announcement of the 2025 Watch.

Throughout a two-year cycle starting in January 2025, nominations selected for the 2025 Watch will have opportunities to enhance communication, build engagement, and work together with WMF to develop preservation strategies and, in certain cases, implement dedicated projects.  
 

Cycle Launch 
The announcement of the Watch is a major media event that reaches global audiences. World Monuments Fund will work to raise international awareness of all 25 sites through news outlets, social media, and our website, as well as by coordinating with nominators and site partners to support local advocacy efforts. In this way, the Watch seeks to stimulate a sense of urgency and encourage stakeholder cooperation. In the announcement, sites may be grouped thematically to bring awareness to key issues and opportunities emerging from the open call.  
 

Building a Relationship  
Over the two years, World Monuments Fund will work with nominators and other stakeholders to evaluate and prioritize local needs at the site and co-design strategies for advocacy, preservation, and fundraising. This two-year engagement forms the basis of the Watch’s support for each site and will be tailored to the needs of each particular case. 

Inclusion on the Watch results in the opportunity for WMF, nominators, and other relevant groups to seek funds for a targeted preservation project. If funds are raised, which is not guaranteed, they will be used to support joint work between WMF and the local partner. Project activities may include targeted advocacy campaigns, planning, research, and education, as well as physical interventions in the historic built environment. Emphasis will be placed on projects that deliver demonstrable social benefits. 

Nominators may also take advantage of the attention drawn to Watch sites to leverage additional support from a variety of sources, including national, regional, and municipal governments; foundations; corporations; other international organizations; and private donors.  

Creative Partnerships 
World Monuments Fund collaborates with leading organizations in the fields of communications and storytelling to provide Watch sites with new tools to creatively share their stories, engage new audiences, and advocate for preservation. From online exhibitions to artistic projects, WMF has teamed up with organizations like Google Arts & Culture and Magnum Foundation in the past to support storytelling through the Watch. Based on need and availability, WMF will work with local partners to match their sites to an opportunity that suits their goals.  

The Watch Network 
Successful nominators will gain exclusive membership to the Watch Network. New for the 2025 Watch cycle, this initiative brings together current and past Watch nominators alongside WMF project associates and preservation experts to share insights, experiences, and perspectives from the field. Membership privileges include access to virtual events and professional trainings as well as an array of resources tailored to inspire exchange and collaboration and support site managers.  

Community Engagement through Watch Day 
To further catalyze local engagement and support, World Monuments Fund will work with local partners to organize a day of community engagement activities dedicated to building awareness and participation in preservation efforts, known as a “Watch Day.” In the 2025 cycle, $2,500 will be made available to each site in support of Watch Day activities. 
 

Nominations are closed for the 2025 Watch. Selected sites will be announced in early 2025.

Past Examples From Watch Cycles

Some examples illustrate the range of nominators, initiatives, and intended outcomes:  

Orongo - Mata Ngarau, May 2011

Rapa Nui (Easter Island), Chile

The Ma’u Henua Indigenous Community, the administrators of Rapa Nui National Park after a successful campaign for greater Indigenous control, nominated the site to the 2020 Watch program seeking WMF’s assistance to preserve the unique rock carvings of Orongo. Since the nomination, WMF and the Ma’u Henua community have worked together with experts in geology and structural engineering to study the issues, identify potential solutions, and facilitate a community-based decision-making process.

Easter Island (Rapa Nui)—Orongo
Hitis that are still giving water, 2021.

Hitis of the Kathmandu Valley, Nepal

Traditional water fountains known as hitis, dating as far back as the sixth century CE, are instrumental for nearly 20% of Kathmandu Valley’s residents who lack reliable access to water. Nominated by the local group Chiva Chaitya Organization, the site’s inclusion on the 2022 Watch called attention to how hitis can help to address an ongoing water crisis exacerbated by climate change. WMF is now working with local partners to study and rehabilitate hitis for continued community use, thus raising awareness about their value to present-day life in the Kathmandu Valley.

Hitis (Water Fountains) of the Kathmandu Valley
The second-class pool at Moseley Road Baths in Birmingham.

Moseley Road Baths, United Kingdom

Local advocates nominated this Edwardian public bath to bring attention to the city council’s plan to shutter it due to budget constraints. Through the Watch, WMF joined a coalition including the Friends of Moseley Road Baths to call awareness to the site’s continuing importance as a hub for health and community wellbeing. Since the Watch, a £32.7-million master plan spearheaded by the National Trust has gone into implementation to revitalize the baths and the nearby library and turn them into a community and cultural center.

Moseley Road Baths
Mam Rashan Shrine in Iraq After Reconstruction

Mam Rashan Shrine, Iraq

This shrine to Mam Rashan, a Yazidi saint, was nominated to the 2020 Watch by the Eyzidi Organization for Documentation after the building was destroyed in 2014 by Daesh (also known as ISIS). Locals sought the reconstruction of the shrine for the benefit of the Yazidi community returning to Sinjar after liberation. WMF worked closely with local partners to reconstruct the Mam Rashan Shrine and again make it a center of worship and ceremony.

Mam Rashan Shrine
Batammariba complexes include granaries and other structures, 2016. Photo credit: Damien Halleux Radermecker.

Koutammakou, Land of the Batammariba, Benin and Togo

The Batammariba people have long maintained their earthen construction traditions, epitomized in their takienta dwellings (sikien in the plural). Nominated to the 2020 Watch, WMF worked with local partners to preserve and transmit traditional construction and maintenance knowledge despite societal shifts. The collaboration has emphasized socio-economic empowerment, working with local artisans and community members for the hands-on conservation of select structures. To ensure sustainability, an environmental component saw the planting of 5,000 trees, reforesting necessary wooden elements for sikien construction.

Koutammakou, Land of the Batammariba
Brown Chapel AME, Selma, Alabama.

Alabama Civil Rights Sites, United States

Nominated by the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, these 12 sites include churches, places of lodging, and other meeting spaces throughout Alabama that have played significant roles in the U.S. Civil Rights Movement. Their inclusion on the 2018 Watch supported the creation of a growing consortium of sites that amplify individual local efforts in identifying, preserving, and promoting this important heritage. The collaboration also bore Voices of Alabama, an oral history project documenting these sites’ stories and their contributions to the long-fought African American struggle for freedom and equality.

Alabama Civil Rights Sites

Frequently Asked Questions

Over the years we have received between 200 and 300 nominations for each cycle of the Watch. We are always seeking ways to be more responsive to the many worthy requests for our attention and assistance.

WMF believes the world should be “watching” important heritage places and recognizing their stewards for a variety of reasons. Places on the Watch are each dealing with unique sets of circumstances and challenges, often representing opportunities for new positive outcomes that may include mitigating risk factors or delivering timely community benefits. While some nominators may advocate for at-risk places, we encourage all kinds of nominations that show how heritage and preservation can make a meaningful difference to the most crucial issues of our time.

Privately owned sites are eligible for the Watch, but private ownership may limit our potential for action. Only places that serve the public interest can benefit financially from World Monuments Fund.

No. Listing on the Watch should not be construed as a claim of ownership.

Places that have been nominated or included in previous cycles of the Watch program may be nominated again. They will undergo the same evaluation and selection process, with additional emphasis placed on how circumstances have changed in the intervening period.

World Monuments Fund is not a grant-making institution, and the process of nominating a site to the Watch is not a grant application. Inclusion on the Watch can create new opportunities for nominators and other stakeholders to advocate for sites and seek funds for a preservation project if they so choose.  Additionally, WMF often raises funds from individuals and grant-making institutions for certain Watch sites to support joint work between WMF and our local partners.

Because the needs and circumstances around each site vary, WMF works closely with successful nominators and other stakeholders to determine the best way to leverage the Watch to make a meaningful contribution at each site. In all cases, successful nominations will benefit from public awareness through the Watch, collaboration with WMF’s expert staff, financial support for a community-based event known as a “Watch Day,” and membership to WMF’s Watch Network.