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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

La maison en ballots de paille : une réponse à la conservation de l'environnement /

Morel, Pascal, January 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.Sc.)--Université du Québec à Montréal, 2002. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 111-114).
2

Straw bales and straw bale wall systems

Bou-Ali, Ghailene, 1968- January 1993 (has links)
Hay and straw bales can be stacked up like giant insulating bricks to form load-bearing walls for a wide variety of structures. The technique could provide home builders with inexpensive, energy efficient, long-lasting, fire-resistant, easily built, comfortable houses from a natural resource yearly renewable and locally available. Unfortunately, the lack of knowledge regarding the structural properties of the bales and the wall systems incorporating them presents a major barrier to straw-bale construction. Without the quantitative information that standard engineering testing would provide, the wider use of bale construction will continue to be severely inhibited. This thesis examines the basic mechanical properties of individual straw bales (stress-strain behavior, ultimate strength, Poisson's ratio, etc ...), and prototype wall systems (vertical strength, in-plane lateral strength, out-of-plane lateral strength, deflection, creep, etc ...). The results of the tests on the individual bales as well as the wall systems are used to develop guidelines and equations for the design of straw-bale structures.
3

Houses of straw :

Jolly, Bridget Elizabeth. Unknown Date (has links)
The principal research for this study is into the invention and use of Solomit, a compressed straw building plate, which became available when a fibre bale building method also sought to ease the European post-Great War housing shortage. Both methods were patented in France in the early 1920s. Solomit patents registered by Serge Tchayeff in France, Australia, and Britain, and patents for bale building by Emile Feuillette registered in France and the US, are analysed. The vernacular precedents of both are argued. The South Australian patents connected to Solomit and registered during the later 1930s are discussed. This study broadly establishes the history of the initial South Australian venture (1935-1937) to manufacture Solomit under licence from Germany and to establish widespread Solomit construction; it notes Solomit's admission (in principle) to the Building Act 1940 (SA); and identifies examples of government building tenders won by the company. Although certain evidence establishes the naivety of the South Australian enterprise about German socio-political realities of 1933-1937, I consider the possibility that Australian Solomit manufacture may have held political promise for the NSDAP (German Nazi Party) in Australia, and follow an assumption that in South America, strongly influenced by NSDAP Germany, the aggressor exploited Solomit for import-export advantages tenuously connected to building projects. / The study suggests that a likely model for Australian Solomit demonstration building was the artisans' housing proposed in the early 1920s by the Swiss-French architect Le Corbusier (1887-1965); and it brings forward Tchayeff and Le Corbusier's collaboration in use of Solomit, particularly in building the Pavillon de L'Esprit Nouveau (1924-1925), thereby emphasising an aspect of this exhibition prototype house previously inadequately exposed. Solomit was manufactured at Berlin from 1929 and was used for urban dwelling extensions and improved thermal insulation. The much wider use of Solomit during the inter-war years, and particularly with the onset of the Great Depression, for German city-peripheral settlements, and in the Weimar Republic and later NSDAP governments' push for Eastlands settlement, is explored. It is probable that in Germany Solomit was overtaken by concurrent and energetically improved efficiencies in building materials and that by the late 1930s little purpose was seen for a material then viewed as regressive. The fate of the South Australian Solomit company showed certain parallels. The relationship of German austerity building of the 1920s to the existing vernacular building methods which were encouraged by government as economical substitutes is explored. These vernacular methods, encouraged by the Republic immediately before Solomit's first production in Germany, are related to Solomit's adoption. Surviving South Australian Solomit houses (built from 1938 to 1961) and other local Solomit constructions (some demolished) are identified. Contrary to some original Australian perceptions, existing Solomit buildings - the walls of which several owners describe as 'hollow' - have generally proved durable. This study maps the extent of South Australian Solomit building; and the penultimate chapter gives to it a pictorial overview. Non-constructional thermal and acoustic Solomit sheeting is currently manufactured in Victoria. Recent Canadian interest in Australian Solomit for its use in fibre bale building suggests a possibly wider future use of Solomit. This study rediscovers Solomit's invention and aspects of its European and Australian use and assessments, and provides a part of the history of a largely forgotten building material. / Thesis (PhDArchitectureandDesign)--University of South Australia, 1998.
4

Design and performance of load bearing shear walls made from composite rice straw blocks a thesis /

Camann, Kevin Robert. Jansen, Daniel Charles, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--California Polytechnic State University, 2009. / Mode of access: Internet. Title from PDF title page; viewed on Jan. 11, 2010. Major professor: Daniel C. Jansen. "Presented to the faculty of California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo." "In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree [of] Master of Science in Civil and Environmental Engineering." "December 2009." Includes bibliographical references (p. 176-180).
5

Assessment of energy efficiency in a passive solar housing development

Valenzuela, Brian, January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--University of Texas at El Paso, 2007. / Title from title screen. Vita. CD-ROM. Includes bibliographical references. Also available online.

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