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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.
51

Nomadic Learning : empower learners allowing them to roam

Kim, Woo Jae January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
52

Lek på allvar / Seriously playful

Erikson, Emma January 2018 (has links)
No description available.
53

RUMSSTANDARDISERING : Ett projekteringsunderlag för Sandviks framtida byggnadsprojekt

Ring, Anna, Norlin, Johanna January 2008 (has links)
<p>The construction industry works today with a time limit, therefore it is important to have rational tools to improve the efficiency in the building process. That’s the reason for this report, where a standard for interior finishes has been developed for Sandvik. The standard for interior finishes is designed as a program for room functions and includes office space and sanitary areas. It is a proposal showing how Sandvik can design their premises in the future. Today there is a special constructions department which deals with all projects in the area. The problem is, however, that everyone works on the basis of their own experiences which have caused the lack of uniformity in the facilities of Sandvik.</p><p>The starting point to enable this study has been how Sandvik’s offices and premises look today. Among other things their finishes have been studied, interviews with concerned people have been made and the function of the main repository has been explored. What the people at the constructions department start with at new projects and why has also been studied. The interviewed persons are mainly employees at the constructions department, but also other people involved in Sandvik’s projects.</p><p>In order to make different standpoints in the choice of materials in the premises a study of those has been made. The selected materials are presented in the standard for interior finishes, where as much information as possible has been included. For surfaces have suppliers, colour and material been clarified. Suppliers have been determined for the firm interior equipment, while the manufacture has been selected for the movable furniture. The standard for interior finishes is supplemented with drawings to illustrate what the rooms may look like, but also to provide a simple way to show adequate places for firm interior equipment.</p><p>Sandvik’s vision is to be a successful company. The hope with the standardisation is to streamline the building process and thereby make gains in both time and money.</p><p>To obtain a better working environment and thereby make the employers feel better is also a purpose for this report.</p> / <p>I den allt mer stressade byggbranschen är det viktigt att få rationella verktyg att arbeta efter för att effektivisera projekteringsarbetet. Det är anledningen till att denna rapport gjorts, där en rumsstandard tagits fram åt Sandvik. Rumsstandarden är utformad som ett rumsfunktionsprogram och omfattar kontorsutrymmen samt våtrum. Det är ett förslag på hur Sandvik kan utforma sina lokaler i framtiden. Idag finns en särskild byggnadsavdelning på området som sköter all projektering. Problemet är dock att alla arbetar utifrån sina egna erfarenheter, vilket har skapat oenhetlighet i deras lokaler.</p><p>För att möjliggöra denna studie har utgångspunkten varit hur det ser ut idag i Sandviks kontor och lokaler. Bland annat har deras ytskikt studerats, intervjuer med berörda personer har gjorts och funktionen i centralförrådet har utforskats. Även vad de utgår från vid nya projekt samt varför har undersökts. Personer som intervjuats är främst personal på byggnadsavdelningen, men också andra involverade personer vid deras projekt.</p><p>För att kunna göra olika ställningstaganden vid val av ytskikt med mera, har en materialstudie gjorts. Valen presenteras sedan i rumsstandarden där så mycket information som möjligt har tagits med. För ytskikten har leverantörer, kulör och material preciserats. Vad gäller fast inredning har fabrikat bestämts, medan endast leverantör har valts för lös inredning. Rumsstandarden kompletteras med ritningar för att illustrera hur rummen kan komma att se ut, men även för att på ett enkelt sätt visa lämplig placering av fast inredning.</p><p>Sandviks vision är att vara ett framgångsrikt aktiebolag. Genom standardiseringen är förhoppningen att rationalisera projekteringen och därigenom göra vinster i både tid och pengar. Målet är även att erhålla en bättre arbetsmiljö och på så vis få personalen att trivas bättre.</p>
54

Kv. Grillen 6 i Sandviken : Förslag till verksamhet för

Bladin, Ann-Marie January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
55

Anpassat boende i Sandvikens kommun : En enkätundersökning och ett ombyggnadsförslag

Larsson, Jerker, Crona, Andreas January 2008 (has links)
<p>Rapporten innefattar tre delar;</p><p>Del I - Enkätundersökning för anpassat boende i Sandviken</p><p>En bostadsenkät skickades ut till 100 hushåll i Sandvikens kommun för att undersöka om det finns ett intresse för anpassat boende, om så är fallet söks även när intresset finns samt vilken typ av bostad som efterfrågas. 45 % svarade på enkäten varav 60 % av dessa kunde tänka sig att flytta. Det var huvudsakligen de som hade postadress Sandviken som var mest intresse av flytt. Den mest eftersökta bostaden var på 2, 3 eller 4 rum och kök i centrala Sandviken. Bostaden skall ha närhet till affärer, service, hälsocentral och apotek, samt närhet till natur, grönområde, promenadstigar och badhus. Undersökningen visade att kök var den viktigaste bostadsdelen och att badrum, vardagsrum och balkong/uteplats var även de viktiga. Minst viktigt i bostaden var sovrum och hall. Det efterfrågades i större utsträckning om en hög standard i bostaden där det var viktigt med modernt badrum och kök.</p><p>Del II – Förslag till bostadsprogram för anpassat boende</p><p>I denna del av rapporten görs en litteraturstudie för att få mer kunskap om vilka behov och krav som ställs vid ny- och ombyggnation av en bostad för att göra den mer tillgänglig. Litteraturstudien inriktar sig mot normalt åldrande och vilka problem som kan uppstå samt hur en bostad kan planeras för att en rullstolsbunden skall kunna bruka bostaden.</p><p>Del III – Ombyggnadsförslag på Dalslänningen i Sandviken</p><p>Rapporten beskriver ”Anpassat boende” som ett lättillgängligt boende utan trösklar och med genomtänkta bostadslösningar, där det både finns bra badrum och ett bra utformat kök för lätt användning. Detta tankesätt skall överföras till ett ombyggnadsförslag på Dalslänningen, ett flerbostadshus i centrala Sandviken byggt 1964, den aktuella byggnaden har 57 lägenheter. Eftersom bostadshuset är byggt efter miljonprogrammets tankar och idéer, leder detta till ett antal problem vid anpassningen för tillgänglighet då husen är oftast byggda efter minimimått. Byggnaden har våtutrymmen runt varje trapphus, därför väljs det en tillbyggnadslösning med hiss och ny entré.</p>
56

PARAMETRISK DESIGN I TIDIGA SKEDEN AV ARKITEKTONISKA PROJEKT / PARAMETRIC DESIGN IN EARLY STAGES OF PROJECTS

Andersson, Daniel January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
57

Scandinavium : Sveriges största inomhusarena

Davidsson, Anneli, Munteanu, Michaela January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
58

Anpassat boende i Sandvikens kommun : En enkätundersökning och ett ombyggnadsförslag

Larsson, Jerker, Crona, Andreas January 2008 (has links)
Rapporten innefattar tre delar; Del I - Enkätundersökning för anpassat boende i Sandviken En bostadsenkät skickades ut till 100 hushåll i Sandvikens kommun för att undersöka om det finns ett intresse för anpassat boende, om så är fallet söks även när intresset finns samt vilken typ av bostad som efterfrågas. 45 % svarade på enkäten varav 60 % av dessa kunde tänka sig att flytta. Det var huvudsakligen de som hade postadress Sandviken som var mest intresse av flytt. Den mest eftersökta bostaden var på 2, 3 eller 4 rum och kök i centrala Sandviken. Bostaden skall ha närhet till affärer, service, hälsocentral och apotek, samt närhet till natur, grönområde, promenadstigar och badhus. Undersökningen visade att kök var den viktigaste bostadsdelen och att badrum, vardagsrum och balkong/uteplats var även de viktiga. Minst viktigt i bostaden var sovrum och hall. Det efterfrågades i större utsträckning om en hög standard i bostaden där det var viktigt med modernt badrum och kök. Del II – Förslag till bostadsprogram för anpassat boende I denna del av rapporten görs en litteraturstudie för att få mer kunskap om vilka behov och krav som ställs vid ny- och ombyggnation av en bostad för att göra den mer tillgänglig. Litteraturstudien inriktar sig mot normalt åldrande och vilka problem som kan uppstå samt hur en bostad kan planeras för att en rullstolsbunden skall kunna bruka bostaden. Del III – Ombyggnadsförslag på Dalslänningen i Sandviken Rapporten beskriver ”Anpassat boende” som ett lättillgängligt boende utan trösklar och med genomtänkta bostadslösningar, där det både finns bra badrum och ett bra utformat kök för lätt användning. Detta tankesätt skall överföras till ett ombyggnadsförslag på Dalslänningen, ett flerbostadshus i centrala Sandviken byggt 1964, den aktuella byggnaden har 57 lägenheter. Eftersom bostadshuset är byggt efter miljonprogrammets tankar och idéer, leder detta till ett antal problem vid anpassningen för tillgänglighet då husen är oftast byggda efter minimimått. Byggnaden har våtutrymmen runt varje trapphus, därför väljs det en tillbyggnadslösning med hiss och ny entré.
59

Scandinavium : Sveriges största inomhusarena

Davidsson, Anneli, Munteanu, Michaela January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
60

Arkitekturtävlingar : om konsten att hitta en vinnare

Svensson, Charlotte January 2008 (has links)
<p>This licentiate thesis investigates architectural competitions and quality assessment  of architecture in an early phase. The project is developed out of a need of knowledge about the role of architectural competitions in design quality improvement and their outcomes in society. It focuses on a central part of the competition: the jury’s judging process and how jury members discuss and evaluate entries in order to select and award a winner. Usually, a competition jury comprises of both architects and laypersons. The architects have the responsibility to guide the non-professional members through the entries. Therefore, the architect members are forced to explain and justify their professional opinions about the design aspects of the entries. The discussions of architecture become pedagogical and straightforward, which facilitate my observations and understanding of the entire process. Besides showing a professional assessment of architecture, the jury situation reveals preferences in a more obvious way than discussions among only architects. The study strives to accumulate knowledge of architectural competitions, jury judgment and evaluations of architectural design quality. It is keen to find out: How is an architectural competition conducted and organized? How does the jury process work? How do they appoint a winner? Is the design assessment a matter of expertise or personal preferences? What is the architect’s role in a competition? Which are the jury’s central problems? Triangulation of obtained data as well as research methods has been used in order to secure the project’s credibility. The survey has been made in four steps by a feasibility study, an analysis of criteria and two case studies. The research is mainly carried out by using mixed methods of investigation. Analysis of the situation, document studies and case studies are shaping the important empirical foundations. The first step was a feasibility study of the architectural competitions in the Nordic countries.1 The study is made together with Dr. Magnus Rönn and Dr. Reza Kazemian and published in two scientific reports. (Kazemian, et al., 2005; Kazemian, et al., 2007) Three different methods of data gathering were used.</p><p>1) A comparison of the competition rules between the four countries.</p><p>2) Statistics extraction and interpretation of the competitions in the four countries from January 1999 to December 2000.</p><p>3) Interviews with 18 key-persons with experiences from competition juries, arrangements of competitions and competition secretaries.</p><p>The research results from the study have been quite unique and informative. One was the development of a preliminary model of a jury judgment process and how it is conducted. The study also indicated that the selection of casesshould be made at least by one open and one invited competition in order to get a variation-rich foundation. The second step was an analysis of evaluation criteria in competition assessments. Documents from nine competitions in different scales (town-planning, building design and furniture design) are investigated. They are compared to a checklist of evaluation aspects from a guide booklet to jury members published by the Competition Secretariat at the Swedish Association of Architects. The study indicates that a set of fundamental criteria exists, and is used in in various scales of professional design evaluation. The feasibility study and criteria analysis provides important information that are useful in the organisation and conduction of the case studies. Based on these premises, two project competitions were selected as case-studies, one was an open competition and the other was an invited competition. The first study was the open competition ”Visans hus i Västervik”2 in the south-east of Sweden. The major task of the competition was to design a building that should be used for conferences and cultural events in Västervik. The jury consisted of eight persons: four architects, two politicians and two experts in musical performance and music festival arrangement. The jury needed five meetings to find a winner among the 97 entries that could best meet the requirements of the competition program. The assessment process started with an out-sorting of entries and a gradual and thorough analysis of the remaining ones. The study showed how rhetoric influence the jury’s work. The entries contained both visual rhetoric in the way they were graphically organized and presented in written rhetoric in the way the texts were prepared. The jury members used verbal rhetoric in their discussions. The different types of rhetoric revealed the preferences and points of interest from the actors in a competition. The architects behind the entries directed themselves toward different parts of the jury. The jury members had different aims with the competition and different interests to look after. By the fourth meeting, the jury came to a critical point when no entry seemed to be good enough. Then in the last meeting the jury studied the entries in a scalemodel. This made them finally agree upon one entry that appeared as fitting in the surroundings. It was the eye that finally settled the competition. The second case study was the invited competition called ”Bildnings- och kulturcentrum i Hagfors.”3 Hagfors is a small town in Sweden. The task was to re-design an existing school. The building should be expanded and rebuilt to give space to the pupils from four other nearby schools that were facing to be closed down. The competition was used by the Hagfors municipality to find appropriate architects to cooperate with, as well as to promote the municipality through its attractive architecture. This project appeared to be controversial and created a debate among the inhabitants of Hagfors who were complaining about the closing down of the four schools in their town. The jury in Hagfors consisted of nine persons: two architects, one professor in education (pedagogy), three politicians, the technical director of Hagfors municipality, the principles from the affected schools and one representative from the Swedish Teachers’ Union. There were four competition entries, and the jury used three meetings in order to select a winner. In this process, two different strategies of assessment appeared. The experienced decision makers in the jury were in favour of an effective selection procedure that meant sorting out entries and using criteria in order to reach a final decision. The architects in the competition carried on their evaluation through architecture criticism. Their strategy was to compare and analyze all the entries in order to reach a common solution. The time pressure made it difficult for the jury members to see the other points of view. But by the last meeting, the jury succeeded to agree upon a winner. The four studies on different aspects of the competition system provides insights of the architectural competitions in Sweden, quality assessment of architecture and the decision making process of the jury. The study provides a complex and informative picture of architectural competitions. The research  findings can be concluded as follows:</p><p>• The jury’s judgment of the entries in an architectural competition is a creative process that follows general directions in combination with the unique competition’s preconditions. A general model of assessment has to be adjusted to the actual competition. The jury’s meeting with the entries cannot be fully predicted.</p><p>• The architects’ particular way to assess architectural design aspects in its early evaluation phases can be questioned by other non-architect jury members due to time pressure. The assessment process must contain quick decisions as well as in-depth analyses of the entries.</p><p>• In spite of the fact that the jury’s decisions are made behind closed doors, the assessment can be influenced by the external debate. The jury’s works, is in this respect dependent to the context.</p><p>• There are some fundamental evaluation criteria that have decisive impacts on how the jury evaluates proposals in competitions. These evaluation criteria indicate a common ground of professional thoughts and understanding of design quality among architects.</p><p>• In jury assessments, a positioning between architects and laymen that represent the arranger can appear. This is due to different professional belongings among the jury members as well as to differences in the interests and aims of the competition. In spite of this, the studied juries succeeded to find a winner.</p><p>• There is a genuine insecurity inherent in the assessment and decision making process of a competition. This is due to the fact that there can always be more than one good solution for a design task.</p><p> 1 Sweden, Norway, Denmark and Finland</p><p>2 ”The house of the song in Västervik” (my translation)</p><p>3 “Educational and cultural centre in Hagfors” (my translation)</p><p> </p>

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