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The villas of Palladio and the transformation of the site /Sobrino, Guillermo Manuel January 1993 (has links)
No description available.
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Site planning for low-rise housing : with special reference to northern climatesPantoja, Adiel H. January 1983 (has links)
No description available.
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Dwelling with Water: Tokyo Waterworks and the Remaking of the Urban Home, 1890–1990Hauk, Michelle L. January 2023 (has links)
This dissertation explores how water technology transformed cultural practices and attitudes towards water through the restructuring of architectural and social space over the course of the twentieth century. For social reformers and architects alike, water’s place in the Japanese dwelling reflected a desire to address broader societal concerns with public health, gender norms, and resource scarcity through the rationalization of domestic and public space. Tracing the flow of water from watershed to kitchen tap, this study considers how the renovation of Tokyo waterworks restructured communal practices surrounding water, how advancements in architectural design and technology influenced the ways families used water in the home, and how the state positioned the dwelling at the forefront of water-management campaigns.
Combining methodologies from architectural history with environmental, socioeconomic, and cultural history, the inquiry crosses multiple scales to show how design mediates the continuously changing relationship between human bodies and the natural resources they consume. It draws on technical materials such as house plans, equipment manuals, and professional publications, blending these with popular-culture sources such as newspaper advertisements, television commercials, and public-service announcements, as well as manga and anime. While advancements in the architectural and technological design of water in twentieth-century Japan made access to natural resources more efficient, convenient, and hygienic—an enormous benefit for the (mostly) women tasked with water’s management—the high-tech “Washlet” toilets and prefabricated “unit baths” ubiquitous in Japan today gradually obscured from view water’s origin and waste’s destination, significantly restructuring the relationship between human beings and the natural environment.
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Matriliny and domestic morphology : a study of the Nair tarawads of MalabarMenon P., Balakrishna. January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Post-occupancy adaptation of affordable single-family housing in MontrealRios, Aurea A. (Aurea Amoris) January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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The temple within : house as symbol of God, self, and bodyHowes, Rosanne January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
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Design criteria for the Middle EastDarwish, Tarek Omar January 1988 (has links)
No description available.
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"Six house types"Dugas, David M. January 1985 (has links)
This thesis seeks to explore, through making.
The object of this making is, as Kahn has said, house. as opposed to a house; or, the house type seen as a generative tool rather than as a singular definitive manifestation of some set of circumstantial needs.
The house is the one intellectual model in architecture which can bring to thinking in design a set of questions in which dwelling in its richest sense can be studied.
Questions of how dwelling is made more possible through the configurations of architecture without the necessity of introducing artificial symbolic structures which cast the physical, material reality of architectural elements into a secondary level of significance, are raised in this thesis through the making of six house types.
The houses are made as a series and are seen as typological structures in which the configuration of possible ways of dwelling are sketched. / M. Arch.
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For me and my friendsOrtega de la Torre, Eduardo January 1985 (has links)
When one thinks of an architect, one usually visualizes a building; its facades, materials and spaces within. Architects, however, have shown an interest in interior and accessory design for decades. Furniture, lamps, rugs, ceramics, flatwear, and more are components that allow an architect to make a more cohesive statement about his or her architecture. / Master of Architecture
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A rural residenceStoltzfus, Eugene January 1985 (has links)
A place to live for a family and guests which structures the landscape and whose form is generated from ideas about small scale informal urban relationships. / Master of Architecture
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