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Industrial buildings: the evolution of industrial building form as affected by changes in technology.Van Heerden, Wikus January 1995 (has links)
A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Architecture,
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, for the
Degree of Master of Science in Building. / During the most recent period of man's transformation,
the cultural evolution, man created many things. The
latter part of this epoch was dominated by industry, when
man created special structures solely for manufacturing
purposes.
The first stage was the Handicrafts or Eotechnic phase
and was charecterlsed by the use of manpower and wind
and water power. During the second stage, the
Manufacturing or Paleotechnic phase, man made use of
steam and electricity. This stage was regarded as
functional in Europe and mechanised in the USA.
The changes in form In these stages follow the same
patterns as the technoloqlcal process, although the
patterns are not unilinear, equal or similar in duration, the
first stage evolutionary, the second stage more
revolutionary. The changes were predominantly the result
of technical pressures, but to a minor extent also of
economical, aesthetical, philosophical and sociological
pressures. Of late managerial pressures have contributed
to the changes as well. A causality is thus revealed in
that the changes in form are a consequence of holistic
changes in these pressures.
However, tho nature and essence of the industrial building
as an enclosed space where something is produced
remains constant, whatever the pressures. / Andrew Chakane 2019
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A study of in-house architectural design capabilities of industrial corporationsStock, Steven Joseph January 2010 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
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Corporate architecture in Finland in the 1940s and 1950s : factory building as architecture, investment and image /Mikkonen, Tuija. January 2005 (has links)
Univ., Diss.--Helsinki, 2005.
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Erscheinungsbild von IndustriebautenSeverain, Sever. January 1980 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität Stuttgart, 1979. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Erscheinungsbild von IndustriebautenSeverain, Sever. January 1980 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Universität Stuttgart, 1979. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Re-establishing purposeDunsmore, Bridget. January 2010 (has links)
Thesis (M.Arch.)--University of Detroit Mercy, 2010. / "April 30 2010". Includes bibliographical references (p. 127).
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Industrial buildings: the evolution of industrial building form as affected by changes in technology.Van Heerden, Wikus January 1995 (has links)
A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of Architecture,
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, for the
Degree of Master of Science in Building. / During the most recent period of man's transformation,
the cultural evolution, man created many things. The
latter part of this epoch was dominated by industry, when
man created special structures solely for manufacturing
purposes.
The first stage was the Handicrafts or Eotechnic phase
and was charecterlsed by the use of manpower and wind
and water power. During the second stage, the
Manufacturing or Paleotechnic phase, man made use of
steam and electricity. This stage was regarded as
functional in Europe and mechanised in the USA.
The changes in form. In these stages follow the same
patterns as the technological process, although the
patterns are not unilinear, equal or similar in duration, the
first stage evolutionary, the second stage more
revolutionary. The changes were predominantly the result
of technical pressures, but to a minor extent also of
economical, aesthetlcal, philosophical and sociological
pressures. Of late managerial pressures have contributed
to the changes as well. A causality is thus revealed in
that the changes in form are a consequence of hotlstlc
changes in these pressures.
However, tho nature and essence of the industrial building
as an enclosed space where something is produced
remains constant, whatever the pressures. / Andrew Chakane 2019
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Emerging patterns of space and time use in the knowledge economySong, Ji-Young January 2010 (has links)
No description available.
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Industrial architecture and politics in Wilhelmine GermanyJefferies, Matthew Martin January 1991 (has links)
This thesis examines the industrial architecture of Imperial Germany in the context of the wider economic and political power struggles of the Wilhelmine era. Written against the backdrop of a lively and ongoing debate on the relative 'modernity' of the Kaiserreich, the main focus falls on two separate but related movements, which campaigned to improve the character of industrial architecture for political, commercial and environmental, as well as aesthetic reasons: the 'Bund Heimatschutz', founded in 1904, and the 'Werkbund' , established three years later. Both organisations developed in opposition to historicism in late 19th century architecture and design. The reformers, who included laymen as well as architects, sought an architecture more "worthy' of the German 'Bürgertum' than the hybrid historical styles, applied to buildings regardless of function or location, which had come to characterise the German 'Gründerzeit'. The 'Heimatschutz' movement lobbied successfully for the introduction of legislation to protect the landscape from the worst ravages of urbanisation and industrial development. The thesis suggests that the general view of 'Heimatschutz' activists, as 'cultural pessimists' opposed to modernisation in all its guises, is inaccurate, and highlights the more pragmatic strand of 'Heimatschutz' thought, which influenced the design of many industrial structures in the 1900s, particularly those erected by local authorities. The bulk of the thesis, however, concentrates on the 'Werkbund'; an organisation whose members proved remarkably successful at winning commissions from Germany industry in the years before 1918. Particular stress is placed on the role played in the organisation by the politician Friedrich Naumann and his followers. It is argued that the 'Werkbund's policy of promoting 'quality' in the German workplace was an integral part of Naumann's political reform programme. The thesis describes the adoption of the 'Werkbund's progressive architecture by a number of leading manufacturing firms, and seeks an explanation in the rivalries which divided German industry at the turn of the century. It concludes with a short study of architecture, industry and municipal politics in Delmenhorst, a small town in the throes of modernisation.
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Refunctioning of old tanneries in Kuşadası, Aydın/Teket, Zeynep Gülden. Turan Hamamcıoğlu, Mine January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Master)--İzmir Institute of Technology, İzmir, 2006. / Keywords: Conservation, tourism, production buildings, refunctioning, Kuşadası. Includes bibliographical references (leaves. 204).
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