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Housing affordability : impacts of zoning and subdivision regulationsHowell, Kenneth Roland January 2011 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas State University Libraries
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Housing for nuclear and single parent families : a comparison by two methodsAsam, Susan Lynn 25 April 1991 (has links)
The vast majority of housing in the United States today has been
created to conform to a family definition that does not match current
demographic realities. The "traditional family" - a married couple with
an employed husband, a homemaker wife, and several children has been
the model family that housing designers have strived to accommodate on a
grand scale since at least the mid-1940's. This type of family,
however, comprises only 10% of all American families; the remaining 90%,
despite being a majority, have had their housing needs ignored. One
family group often considered to be non-traditional and often left out
of housing considerations is the single parent family. This family type
is an established household form in the United States; currently nearly
one third of all American families are single parent families, most of
which are headed by women.
During the past few years housing projects have begun to appear
that are designed to house "non-traditional families" such as single
parent families. It has been generally assumed that the spatial needs
of single parent families are different from those of nuclear families
or the "traditional family". This research will focus on the analysis
of housing as designed for single parent families in comparison to
housing as designed for the American nuclear family. Floor plans of the
two housing types were obtained from the following cities: Denver, CO,
Hayward, CA, Providence, RI, and Minneapolis, MN.
The intent of this study is to examine what, if any, differences
occur in the spatial orientation of housing designed for single parent
families and housing designed for the nuclear family: the single family
detached home. The study examined room layout in relation to use and
commonly accepted social function. Two methods of analysis were
employed: gamma analysis as developed by Hillier and Hanson and
annotated analysis developed specifically for this research. The method
of gamma analysis was used to determine if the housing as designed for
the two family types is different in form and social function, while the
annotated analysis was used to measure the "fit" of the housing for each
of the family types.
It was originally expected that the single parent family dwellings
would exhibit a higher degree of integration than the single family
detached homes based on predictions gleaned form the literature.
However, the gamma analysis revealed a lower mean relative asymmetry
value for the single family detached houses (0.308), indicating a higher
degree of integration, than the mean relative asymmetry value for the
single parent family dwellings (0.368). This difference was not found
to be significant (p = 0.276). The annotated analysis results indicated
single family detached houses scored a better fit to their intended
family type (mean annotated analysis score = 0.638) than did the single
parent family dwellings to their intended family type (mean annotated
analysis score = 0.533). Again, this difference was not found to be
significant (p = 0.385).
The findings of this study provide a glimpse at the interior
spatial arrangements of housing as designed for the two family types in
question. While the results of the two analysis methods seems to
indicate that the interior spatial arrangement of housing is not meeting
the needs of either family type, more research should be conducted to
further substantiate the findings. These findings will be of interest
to designers of homes, housing developers, planners and policy makers,
and researchers in the field of housing, all of whom can have an effect
on the shape of the housing environment and can help make it more
suitable for all family types. / Graduation date: 1991
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Architects and the design of ordinary single-family houses in the United States the American Institute of Architects and the Architects' Small House Service Bureau /Tucker, Lisa Marie. Schwarz, Benyamin. January 2008 (has links)
Title from PDF of title page (University of Missouri--Columbia, viewed on Feb 25, 2010). The entire thesis text is included in the research.pdf file; the official abstract appears in the short.pdf file; a non-technical public abstract appears in the public.pdf file. Dissertation advisor: Dr. Benyamin Schwarz. Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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Post-occupancy adaptation of affordable single-family housing in MontrealRios, Aurea A. (Aurea Amoris) January 1995 (has links)
Home builders are supplying mass housing projects which are designed without taking into consideration the specific needs and expectations of residents. As well, house are not produced with enough flexibility to enable homeowners to perform easy adaptations that would express their own choices and accommodate their particular requirements. On the other hand, due to economic constraints, most first-time home buyers usually cannot afford the professional services of architects in order to have a house specifically designed to suit their needs and aspirations. / This research explores the different types of modifications that occupants of affordable single-family housing in Montreal make to their residences upon occupancy. / The survey revealed a high level of user intervention--93.6% of the residents made the modifications by themselves. This demonstrates that residents fully engage in housing adaptations when they are given the opportunity to do so, as is the case in the researched houses which offered some type of flexibility in the form of an open and unfinished basement. 108 of the 141 households took advantage of the originally unfinished basement by finishing it and adapting it to their needs and desires. / The author concludes that a house should be adaptable and flexible enough to respond to residents' demands, allowing them to adapt their living spaces according to their personal choices and requirements, as well as to personalise it. As well, the author, convinced that houses do not need to be entirely finished since residents will modify them in any event, suggests certain guidelines and provides recommendations on how affordable single-family houses in Montreal can best be designed to allow for post-occupancy adaptation and user intervention. (Abstract shortened by UMI.)
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The temple within : house as symbol of God, self, and bodyHowes, Rosanne January 1995 (has links)
This thesis examines the house as symbol of God, self, and body. This is a way to explore the expression of individuality both incorporated in, and invoked by the middle-class single family home, particularly for women. The theme, "the temple within," is intended to create a conceptual framework for the identification of activities which give the elements of the house meaning for the occupants. The elements of house, garden, hearth, entrance, windows, attic/stair/cellar, and walls and spaces, are identified through the analysis of primary sources. These are the Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation Competition Series stock plans from 1947 to 1963, as well as two suburban homes from the Carlington neighbourhood in Ottawa, Ontario. The thesis concludes with a discussion of the appropriateness of these symbols of home as a vehicle for women's identity of self.
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Regional real property valuation forecast accuracyCote, Katherine Nicole Arnold, January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Texas at El Paso, 2008. / Title from title screen. Vita. CD-ROM. Includes bibliographical references. Also available online.
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Summer water use in compact communities : the effect of small lots and growth management plans on single-family water use in King County, Washington /Sakrison, Rodney G. January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Washington, 1996. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves [189]-194).
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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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A Gulf Coast residenceSwensson, Earl S. January 1953 (has links)
Master of Science
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