Triglav National Park
The management of Triglav National Park is the responsibility of the Triglav National Park Public Institution, based in Bled, which operates under the Ministry of the Environment and Spatial Planning. The professional and common services of the TNP Authority permanently employ 24 people, while the Professional Ranger Service employs 20 people and another seven people work at the Trenta Lodge TNP Information Centre.
The principal task of the Triglav National Park Public Institution is the protection and conservation of the pristine nature of the park, but it also carries out specialist and research tasks. It is also responsible for preserving the autochthonous cultural heritage as the basis for sustainable development. For Slovenia, the Alpine cultural heritage is of utmost importance because it connects Slovenes with the family of Alpine nations.
The cultural heritage of the park is very interesting, diverse and picturesque, because the park lies at the meeting point of various climates as well as various cultures, each of which have left a mark on the cultural heritage of the area. The register of immovable cultural heritage with the Ministry of Culture of RS contains 300 units within the area of the Triglav National Park; secular architectural heritage prevails (approximately one third of all registered units), followed by memorial heritage (almost 25 per cent), settlement heritage (approximately 17 per cent), religious architectural heritage (just over 14 per cent) and archaeological heritage (almost 7 per cent).
A number of museums are located within the borders of the Triglav National Park, including the Upper Sava Valley Museum, Jesenice, the Kobarid Museum, Oplen House, the Museum of Alpine Dairy Farming, Stara Fužina and the Tolmin Museum. The Park authority also directly manages the following museum institutions: