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Rebuilding the Jefferson pool houses, Warm Springs, VirginiaHall, Anne Stratton 24 May 2017 (has links)
The warm springs pools, a natural wonder, are worth protecting and preserving. They are an important monument to the history and culture of the area. Architecture has the opportunity to function as a catalyst to reuse and reinterpret spaces in order to strengthen their place in history.
This thesis is an investigation into the history of the warm spring pools and an analysis of existing conditions in order to determine the best approach to rejeuvinate and enhance the structures. It is an attempt to design updated structures while maintaining a balance between the old and new.
Decisions on how to maintain and enhance the structures were made through study sketches, photographs and model building. The questions that are posed in the project include but are not limited to what can be changed or updated to not take away from what exists. / Master of Architecture
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An analysis of the environmental impact statement of the Warm Springs Dam ProjectCurtis, Cassie Susan, 1951- January 1976 (has links)
No description available.
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Indigenous Architecture: Envisioning, Designing, and Building The Museum At Warm SpringsJanuary 2012 (has links)
abstract: Many Indigenous communities in North America develop tribal museums to preserve and control tribal knowledge and heritage and counteract negative effects of colonization. Tribal museums employ many Indigenous strategies related to Indigenous languages, knowledges, and material heritage. I argue that architecture can be an Indigenous strategy, too, by privileging Indigeneity through design processes, accommodating Indigenous activities, and representing Indigenous identities. Yet it is not clear how to design culturally appropriate Indigenous architectures meeting needs of contemporary Indigenous communities. Because few Indigenous people are architects, most tribal communities hire designers from outside of their communities. Fundamental differences challenge both Indigenous clients and their architects. How do Indigenous clients and their designers overcome these challenges? This dissertation is a history of the processes of creating a tribal museum, The Museum At Warm Springs, on the Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation of Oregon. The focus is to understand what critical activities Tribal members, designers, and others did to create a museum whose architecture represents and serves its community. The study also considers how people did things so as to honor Indigenous traditions. Design and construction processes are considered along with strategies that Tribal members and their advocates used to get to where they were prepared to design and build a museum. Interviews with Tribal members, designers, and others were central sources for the research. Other sources include meeting minutes, correspondence, Tribal resolutions, and the Tribal newspaper. Visual sources such as drawings, photographs, and the museum itself were significant sources also. This study revealed several key activities that the Confederated Tribes did to position themselves to build the museum. They built an outstanding collection of Tribal artifacts, created and supported a museum society, and hired an outstanding executive director. The Tribes selected and secured a viable site and persisted in finding an architect who met their needs. Collaboration--within the interdisciplinary design team and between designers and Tribal members and contractors--was key. Tribal members shared cultural knowledge with designers who adapted to Indigenous modes of communication. Designers were sensitive to the landscape and committed to representing the Tribes and their world. / Dissertation/Thesis / Ph.D. Architecture 2012
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The Use of Community-Based Conservation in Natural Resource Management: Case Studies from The Nature Conservancy of VirginiaBabylon, Ruth G. 20 November 2003 (has links)
In March 2002, The Nature Conservancy purchased a 9,000-acre tract of land on and near Warm Springs Mountain in Bath County, Virginia. The purpose of this paper is to examine community-based conservation strategies utilized by The Nature Conservancy in two well-established Virginia reserves to determine the effectiveness of those strategies in the protection of Warm Springs Mountain. The Conservancy's previous work on Virginia's Eastern Shore and in the Clinch Valley of southwest Virginia reveals the organization's transition from a strategy of mere land acquisition to the use of community-based conservation in an effort to involve local citizens and promote a proper balance between economics and the environment.
The community-based conservation model developed by TNC on the Eastern Shore and utilized further in the Clinch Valley works well for ecoregions that fit a particular typology. The paper discusses the differences between that typology and the factors affecting the protection of Warm Springs Mountain. In addition, the paper outlines the lessons TNC learned from both positive and negative experiences in the two earlier preserves and proposes how these lessons can be applied to the Warm Springs Mountain Preserve. / Master of Urban and Regional Planning
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Using computers for reversing language shift : ethical and pragmatic implications from a Wasco case studyDenis, Armelle 26 April 2001 (has links)
Indigenous languages worldwide are rapidly disappearing, forced out of
use by the spread of dominant Western culture and its languages. On the Warm
Springs reservation of Oregon, the Culture and Heritage department, the tribal
agency in charge of language preservation, is offering instruction in all three
languages of the reservation: Wasco, Sahaptin and Northern Paiute. Most of the
class offerings target the children of the tribes. In an effort to stimulate their
interest, Culture and Heritage has considered creating language learning computer
games. During a ten-week internship with Culture and Heritage in the spring of
1999, I did preliminary research for a Wasco computer game. Using participant
observation and informal interviews with children, elders and Warm Springs
Elementary School teachers, I developed a possible structure and scenario for a
game centered on traditional subsistence activities. I also identified obstacles to
the realization of language computer games, such as lack of technological
resources in Warm Springs, and elders' resistance to computers. Results and
recommendations were issued in a public meeting in Warm Springs and presented
in a report. This thesis is a case study exploring in greater depth issues that arose
during my internship, like the politics of anthropological fieldwork on
reservations, and issues related to the Wasco computer game project, such as the
pragmatics of language preservation and the role of computers in reversing
language shift. On the latter, it was found that the introduction of computers tends
to disrupt traditional hierarchies and patterns for the transmission of knowledge.
In view of the cultural, financial and logistic costs, the benefits of Computer
Assisted Language Learning for the preservation of severely endangered
languages are uncertain at best. / Graduation date: 2002
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Identity, territory and place insights from the Warm Springs Reservation /Knox, Margaret Ann. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2005. / Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 244-262). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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Identity, territory and place : insights from the Warm Springs Reservation /Knox, Margaret Ann. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2005. / Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 244-262). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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A History of the Warm Springs Reservation 1855-1900Cliff, Thelma Drake 06 1900 (has links)
671 pages / It is evident from a study of the history of these Indians,
that the Warm Springs, together with other Oregon tribes, did not benefit
greatly from the Government system of colonizing and reservations.
It is true that they received the advantages of education and medical
service furnished by the Government in accordance with treaty stipulations,
and some protection from their enemies; but the value of these
advantages may be questioned.
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