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Prefabricated systems in school buildings.Chang, Cheng-Wong. January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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Creating an architecture for the suburban strip shopping centerSalman, Javier Francisco 08 1900 (has links)
No description available.
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Alternative on-site resources and their use : a guidelines for landscape architectsCalvin, Samuel Riley January 1979 (has links)
This thesis deals with landscape architectural site-planning considerations of on-site alternative energy and material resources. On-site resources are those occurring on nearly every site. In, particular, the energies are solar, wind, water, and organic-waste; the materials are rock and earth. The thesis content includes basic information and guidelines necessary for making preliminary design decisions regarding these alternatives. Emphasis has been placed on analyzing site conditions, on measuring the available resource, on estimating the usable energy resource available, on storing the energy and on the use of the resource.In addition, there is a case study demonstrating the use of the information in the site-design process for a wind machine. The Appendix lists names and addresses of manufacturers concerned with alternative energy resources as well as containing examples of some of the literature for the wind energy industry. / Department of Landscape Architecture
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Vincennes, Indiana riverfront : an analysis of design and development potentialsSmith, David Sidney January 1979 (has links)
This thesis identifies those elements significant to the redevelopment of urban riverfronts. Its purpose is to determine those planning and design considerations which will protect and enhance river environments while increasing the opportunities for people to enjoy a physical and visual contact with the river. This is accomplished by presenting an overview of urban riverfronts, their development and problems, rivers and their environment, historical progression of settlements along rivers, and planning and design considerations for urban riverfronts.In addition, this thesis presents a case study which applies urban riverfront planning and design considerations to the Vincennes, Indiana-Wabash Riverfront. / Department of Landscape Architecture
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Campus planning with emphasis on urban universities.Siddiqui, Mohammed Liaquatullah. January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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Prefabricated systems in school buildings.Chang, Cheng-Wong. January 1971 (has links)
No description available.
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A book of drawingsDenegre, Joseph J. January 1986 (has links)
Work is presented to show one architect's findings, relating process rather than a single project. The book itself is conceived as the final product. Included are pages from the architect's notebook; axonometric studies and perspective sketches; and diagrams of the work. The idea for a chapel is presented; the chapel may be explained, but is not yet defined. Short projects, each contributing to the architect's understanding of his world, follow. / Master of Architecture
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The church rememberedRichter, Barbara Clare January 1988 (has links)
the vision
the vision is composed
broken glass shiny
sharp edges of light
beckon the captured bird
come into the world you wish to create
the stuff of strange silent dreams
the waters of the fountain
long corridors
small rooms
the big room
dance the presence of the sacred
see
disunity seen
the sparkling colors shining
beckoning
the worlds of imagination and possibility
of confusion and chaos
fractured to bits
the mind and the hand
destroy the whole
in order
to see
destroy the whole and leave only the pieces
to be seen
what is irreducible
the element
constructs
that which is intuited
the vision
choreographs the dance
with a more limited palette / Master of Architecture
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Four projects: gate, island, square, airportHumphry, Melinda Susan January 1987 (has links)
"When we go wandering....it is ourselves we desire to have translated into stones and plants, and it is in ourselves that we wish to walk."
-Nietzche
What happens when a building speaks to you?
The structure makes a simple statement. That statement is reinforced by the light, the space, and the primary materials and how they are connected to the secondary materials and the tertiary materials. Attention is given to the scale of a large group of people, as well as to the scale of a man and to the size of his hand.
Unlike the familiar image of a machine, architecture retains the complexities of life and is founded on them. It develops in a variety of episodes, situations, and possible conditions. The relative juxtaposition of structured elements (walls, surfaces, structures, windows) conveys a sense of the whole. It is harmonious because it is related to a purpose. It is beautiful because it is a poetic manifestation of life. Thus, a building is a reasoned fragment, the sign of a presence. Its aesthetic is a condition discovered, not a starting point. / Master of Architecture
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A museum of Viking explorationYahn, Jacqueline January 1988 (has links)
Master of Architecture
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