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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
351

NA PASNÍKU / ON THE PASNIK

Siegelová, Kateřina Unknown Date (has links)
The topic of my thesis On the Pasník a time and decomposition. I have produced small houses from natural materials and placed them in a forest. The subject of my work is to record the flow of time. The outcome of my work is time based large-formal drawing. The buildings on the drawing gradually collapse and disappear. Thus I have created the time drawing.
352

Urban sunspaces : ecology of atria and arcades

Glässel, Joachim W January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 1981. / MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND ROTCH. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 160-167). / Historically, atria were protected interior patios; well perceived for their climate tempering and spatial amenity to the building; matching a peaceful private outdoor with the yearly climate cycles. Public buildings adopted this in larger scale, and with the ending 18th century, atria and arcades merged to a period of architectural highlights of glass covered interiors in steel and glass. Passages, hotels and public buildings of an emerging industrial society in Europe and Northern States spurred the evolution of the "Great Indoors" as an urban feature. The ecology of these indoors were consciously achieved by passive means of temperature control. With the rise of mechanical conditioning and excessive use of glass at facades by the beginning of this century, atria and arcades disappeared more or less from the architectural vocabulary. The late 1950s though experienced a revival of atria as a commercial amenity in malls, hotels and similar type of public places. These atria, however, were generally mechanical conditioned; just typically being enormous energy wasters. With the growing urge for energy conservation today, new parameters form our buildings. For this, atria and arcades of urban scale and passive control achieve a new validity as energy conscious urban form. As the key to our energy future in buildings lies well in the urban context, whose inventory per se offers already a fair degree of energy efficiency, improvements there would yield greatest rewards compared to current suburban solar sprawl. The re-interpretation of atria and arcades will provide a perfect planning tool for this urban energy conservation. The glass covered indoors will match with urban scale and site restraints and spur urban life for livable norther winter cities. Exploring atria and arcades as climate buffers and interior amenity for snow belt latitudes, this thesis presents an architectural review, and concludes with design patterns for habitable and energy conscious urban indoors. / by Joachim W. Glässel. / M.S.
353

Construction products that contribute to increased flexibility in wood-frame low-rise housing

Lu, Wen-Chieh Richard, 1973- January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
354

Urban housing alternatives : with special reference to the courthouse and the townhouse

Onorato, G. (Gianmarco) January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
355

Co lze postavit v největším vnitrobloku města Brna? / What can be built in the largest city block in Brno?

Rýznarová, Iveta January 2012 (has links)
The principal idea of design is opening between symmetrical apartment houses Kpt. Jarose 37,39 and Keller´s palace, making inner yard throughpass for pedestrians and creating handsome community like dwelling on the edge of historical downtown by making living structure specific for living in a city.
356

Energianvändning för småhus med olika storlek : En systematisk jämförelse mellan tre småhus i Västerås med 30, 60 respektive 120 m2 golvarea

Hjulström, Anna January 2022 (has links)
Purpose: The purpose of this degree project was to compare the differences in energy demand for three different sizes of smaller, detached one-family houses in Sweden, and to investigate the advantages and challenges of living in a significantly smaller house than the typical Swedish one-family house. Method: The comparison was made between one typical sized detached one-family house and two significantly smaller houses of the same technical standard. The differences in energy demand for the three houses focused on heat losses, passive heat gain and the demand for active heating. To investigate the advantages and challenges of living in significantly small houses information was gathered through different sources of literature and from other people’s experiences. Results: The result showed that the smallest of the three houses had 87 percent lower demand for active heating than the largest house, and the second smallest house had 59 percent lower demand for active heating than the largest house. In addition, the heating season for the smallest houses was three months shorter per year than for the other two houses. The advantages of living in a significantly smaller house than the typical Swedish one-family house was mainly economically and environmentally based. The challenges were mainly the limited space that a smaller living area entails. Conclusions: The project concluded that there is a significant amount of energy that can be saved by choosing to live in a smaller house than the typical Swedish one-family house, and that the advantages of living in a smaller house was greater than the challenges.
357

Rooming Houses and Health: A Case Study

Binch, Joanna 11 January 2022 (has links)
Background: Rooming house residents have high rates of morbidity and mortality, yet little is known about why this disparity in health exists. Research Question: How are rooming houses linked to health? Case: Social exclusion of rooming house residents in downtown Ottawa, bounded by the neighborhood, and Ottawa’s political policies at the time of data collection (September 2019-June 2020). Methodology: A single embedded descriptive case study was informed by multiple sources of evidence, and involved a community advisory group (CAG). Rooming house residents took photos, participated in a community walk-about with participant observations and attended a focus group. Two additional focus groups were conducted; one with fellow rooming house residents, another with the CAG. Interviews with rooming house front-line service providers and a secondary data set of homeless service measures also informed the case. Findings: 1. Rooming house residents (n=10) took 112 photos, and (n=8) took part in a focus group where two broad themes emerged: Housing is health care, and just managing today. 2. Interviews with front-line service providers (n=11) focused on two themes: There are many costs to living in a rooming house, and rooming house front-line service providers wear many hats. 3. Between a sample of sheltered homeless (n = 60) and rooming house residents (n=52), there was no difference found for several health indicators, including frequency of care received in the emergency room, hospitalization as an inpatient, and if substance use made it difficult to stay or afford housing. Focus groups with rooming house residents who did not take photos (n=10) and the GAG (n=6) contributed to persona co-creation revealing financial and contextual factors affecting the health of rooming house residents. Conclusion: The shared spaces of rooming houses create a tension between offering community and creating a risk environment. The negative health consequences to living in a rooming house are mitigated by the many roles that rooming house front-line service providers play in filling gaps. This study suggests the need to definitively position rooming house residents on the housing continuum in order to ensure equitable distribution of resources to optimize the health of this vulnerable population.
358

The Seven of U.S.: Simulation and the American Suburb

Gormley, Alex T. 19 September 2017 (has links)
No description available.
359

A House that Connects: enriching life through connection to inhabitant and site

Ekama, Peter J. 03 August 2010 (has links)
No description available.
360

Toadman and Other Encounters

Grimes, Peter J. 23 September 2011 (has links)
No description available.

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