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Investigations Into The Program and Typology of a Contemporary Public Thermal Bath HouseSchumacher, Brian 01 January 2013 (has links) (PDF)
This thesis presents an inquiry into the nature of and history behind public thermal bathhouses, as well as a design proposal for a new and uniquely site-based public thermal bathhouse structure, the form of which has been developed with an eye toward typology.
The research and writings of this thesis explore the topic of public thermal bathhouses, both as historic phenomena and viable places of congregation still relevant and of great importance to healthy and vital contemporary communities. An effort has been made to demonstrate that written histories, archaeological landmarks, and contemporary international urban communities throughout the world provide ample documentation in support of the notion that public thermal bath houses both served and continue to serve an integral role within healthy, vital and sustainable cultures.
The physical modeling, drawings and sketches of this thesis develop ideas about form and materiality, and explore and bring together discreet architectural phenomena into a singular, formal, proposal for a prototypical public bath house typology, one whose program and form are well suited to a contemporary small town within the United States.
At present, the ritual of public bathing exists within the United States, at best, far outside main stream culture as a singular, sensational event such as a hot spring or a commercial, private day spa- neither of which retain any semblance of the core principals, typological rituals, degree of sensory immersion, or whole-body therapy that define the essence of a more traditional and timeless public bathing experience.
It is the intention of this thesis to present a compelling case for why a public bathhouse not only could exist on the current American landscape, but moreover why it should, and if so, what form it might take.
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Relationships between Jungian typology and value-orientationFunkhouser, Thomas Richard 01 January 1966 (has links) (PDF)
This study hypothesizes that there exists between a person's value orientation as measured by the Study of Values and his function-types as described by Jung. It is the E's assumption that there is some kind of correspondence between the value processes and the function-types because of their similar approaches. For example, the sensing function is identical with perception of stimuli being received through the sense organs while the aesthetic value seeks form and harmony in an experience. Each is concerned with an impression as it is perceived. The thinking function and the theoretical value are concerned with cognition, logical analysis of events, and rational inferences. The feeling function places a value or a judgement on an object, whether personal, impersonal, or identical, in a manner void of any prior logical analysis. The social value is more related to group interaction than is the feeling function. But, as with the feeling function, the group interaction of the social value is based more upon a judgement rather than upon a logical analysis. Both the intuiting function and the religious value are concerned with the mystical meanings and potential of a content. In summary, and in testing Jung's theory concerning the relationships between the functions, it is hypothesized that:
1(a) there is an inverse relationship between the sensing and the intuiting functions;
1(b) there is an inverse relationship between the thinking and the feeling functions;
2. (a) there is a positive relationship between the sensing function find the aesthetic value; in other words, the higher the sensing function, the higher the aesthetic value;
2(b) there is a positive relationship between the thinking function and the theoretical value; in other words, the higher the thinking function, the higher the theoretical value;
2(c) there is a positive relationship between the feeling function and the social value; in other words, the higher the feeling function, the higher the social value; and,
2(d) there is a positive relationship between the intuiting function and the religious value; in other words, the higher the intuiting function, the higher the religious value.
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Genotype-Phenotype: Investigations in TypologyPontius, Sarah E. 02 July 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Bourbon Hub: Industry RedefinedLong, Melissa E. 28 June 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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The Retrofit: Suburban Ideals Into City GridReinersman, Michael D., M.A. January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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An examination of relations between reflective thinking and psychological types /Hoover, Randy Louis January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
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Reimaging vacant urban land as green infrastructure: Assessing vacant urban land ecosystem services and planning strategies for the City of Roanoke, VirginiaKim, Gunwoo 26 April 2015 (has links)
A typology of urban vacant land was developed using Roanoke, Virginia, as the study area. Because of its industrial past, topography and climate, Roanoke provides a range of vacant land types typical of those in many areas of the Mid-Atlantic, Eastern and Midwestern United States. A comprehensive literature review, field measurements and observations analysis and aerial photo interpretation and ground-truthing methods were utilized to identify and catalog vacant parcels of land and the results were mapped using i-Tree Canopy to identify the following types of urban vacant land: post-industrial (3.34 km2), derelict (4.01 km2), unattended with vegetation (17.3 km2), natural (2.78 km2), and transportation-related (5.01 km2). Unattended with vegetation sites are important resources as the health biodiversity found in natural sites benefits urban populations and they represent the highest plantable space. The redesign of post-industrial sites builds a city's image and transportation-related sites can contribute a green infrastructure network of open spaces. This typological study has significant implications for policy development, and for planners and designers seeking the best use for vacant urban land.
The analysis of Roanoke's urban forest revealed around 210,000 trees on vacant land, a tree cover of 30.6%. These trees store about 107,000 tons of carbon (worth $7.65 million) and remove about 2,300 tons of carbon ($164,000), and about 91 tons of air pollution ($916,000) every year, which is high relative to other land uses. Trees on vacant land are estimated to reduce annual residential energy costs by $211,000 for the city's 97,000 residents and their structural value is estimated at $169 million. The methodology applied to assess ecosystem services in this study can also be used to assess ecosystem services of vacant land in other urban contexts and improve urban forest policies, planning, and the management of vacant land. The study findings support the inclusion of trees on vacant land providing a new vision of vacant urban land as a valuable ecological resource by demonstrating how green infrastructure can be used to enhance ecosystem health and promote a better quality of life for city residents. / Ph. D.
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The Historic Canal System in Bangkok, Thailand: Guidelines for Reestablishing Public Space FunctionsChansiri, Noppamas 27 May 1999 (has links)
This thesis proposes guidelines for reestablishing the historic canal system on Rattanakosin Island, Bangkok as a public space system and a connector of key public spaces. The study examines the historic value and cultural symbolism of the canals through evolutionary morphological analysis, establishing that the canals are primary structural elements in the city, since they have retained the integrity of their physical form over time, and have come to hold cultural meaning for the Thai people. The canals have also accommodated different functions over time, in response to a changing urban context. There is potential for them to accept new functions as recreational spaces, connectors of key public spaces, and as tourist destinations.
Typological analysis of structural characteristics of the canals yields seven canal types that have potential to accommodate public space functions. The study proposes guidelines for the seven canal types that will enhance these potentials and ensure the preservation of the canals' physical form. / Master of Landscape Architecture
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City Living: Exploring the Modern Rowhouse TypologyMurray, Teryn Nicole 12 December 2016 (has links)
The traditional rowhouse form was a result of economical use of available space and materials that provided its occupants a home that fulfilled functional and societal needs. The result was a series of rooms along a travel corridor with a distinct underlining organization. The typology was established by certain characteristics of spatial configuration, constructional methods and ordering systems that kept the building economical. Popular attempts to accommodate modern needs into these buildings have lead to implementing the "open-plan" concept and creating a series of floors verses a series of rooms.
This thesis explores the rowhouse within the modern context of Washington D.C. and attempts to redefined the typology for new construction. The desire is to resort back to the historical relevance of the individual room and create a typology appropriate for modern single-family needs. Four empty sites, each with their own context and conditions within the cityscape, are used to create four individual rowhouses that exemplify this new typology. The proposed row houses exhibit architectural structuralism and phenomenology, resulting in four rowhouses that complete the context they are set in, yet emerge with their own identity. / Master of Architecture / The exploration of typology in architecture is a historical and contemporary phenomena that classifies physical characteristics of the built environment into distinct types. An architectural typology instills historical continuity and spatial hierarchy, which guides and develops each design.
This thesis explores the historical characteristics that make the typology of a rowhouse distinctive and re-examines it to accommodate the modern needs of a newly built rowhouse. The narrow space enclosed by two parallel walls creates a unique list of challenges for the typology. The need for light and air, the economic use of space, and personal desire drive architectural design decisions and a hierarchical order must be established to achieve this. This exploration ends with four different proposed rowhouse designs located in Washington D.C.
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A Typology of Gastro Tourism Consumers: A Conceptual Classification of Gastronomic Tourists' Consumer BehaviorThomas, Morgan Avery, Thomas 04 October 2018 (has links)
No description available.
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