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Reframing Urban Design to sequence developing world cities: designing for patterns in Yeoville/Bellevue, JohannesburgAbed, Abdul Aziz 12 May 2015 (has links)
This thesis is being submitted for the Degree of Masters In Urban Design at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. / Current understandings of Urban Design point towards the fact that
it is the art and science of city making. Like other aspects of Architecture,
it begins with a site analysis, followed by the formulation of
a vision for the built environment and thereafter a process of transforming
the vision into reality (Carmona et.al, 2003). Thus, Urban
Design is perceived as a discipline that gives rise to the form and
defi nition of the full spectrum of forces including social, economic,
cultural, ecological, political and aesthetic dynamics (Dixon,
2005). The role of the Urban Designer can therefore be understood
as central to a number of other stakeholders such as Traffi c Engineers
dealing with vehicular movement, Civil Engineers concerned
with structural design, Architects designing built form, Landscape
Architects designing open space, Urban Planners formulating policy
and the Property Developers involved in aspects of land investment.
However, as urban populations grow, become more diverse
and fragmented, the function of Urban Design and the role of the
Urban Designer becomes questionable (Madanipour, 1996).
The past tradition of thought in Urban Design (visual artistic approach)
incorporated a fi rm belief in the physical aspects of city
making relying on built form as a primary informant. This tradition
has, however, been replaced by a more recent tradition (social
usage approach) which incorporates a fi rm belief in interpreting
phenomena occurring in public space. This served as a response
married to the phenomenon of increased population density and
rapid urbanisation persistent in the developing city context due
to global migration patterns (Watson, 2009). Consequently, in its
plight to reframe Urban Design to sequence developing cities, this
thesis conducts a comparative analysis between developed and
developing world cities regarding national migratory, population
density and urbanisation trends and the effects that it poses on regions, cities and localities. In so doing, it progresses to a realisation
that increased living densities in turn spills over into
the public realm and onto the street edge for retail and social
service access purposes. Thus, a greater mix of uses in the
built environment is forged. The increased density of people
on sidewalks in essence stimulates transport movement as a
collector service which structures street connectivity systems
around retail facilities and social services. From the analytical
fi ndings here, this thesis recognises that there exist relationships
between built form confi guration and socio-economic activities
occurring in public space. In light of the above, the thesis
employs the combination of the visual artistic and social usage
approaches to form the making places approach, which
can be appropriate for Urban Design in developing cities.
After establishing a new approach, the thesis structures the
above-mentioned operations into an evolved conceptual
framework. Thus, the conceptual framework recognises that
time change in developing cities in conjunction with population
density and migration cause overlapping relationships between
building density, housing and social services, retailing,
land use mixes, transport/movement and street connectivity
across various scales and within the formal, semi-formal/semiinformal
and informal realms. With this being the case, the thesis
analyses current literature which argues that the broader
problem is the fact that the interrelatedness of the above-mentioned
concepts is negated in theory. It develops the problem
statement further by stating that a lack of the interrelatedness
of the concepts contained in the conceptual framework has in
turn infl uenced a lack of such in current research and urban
design practice in developing cities. This is confi rmed through measuring the extent to which three South African Urban
Design practice case studies consider concepts of building
density, housing and social services, retailing, land use
mixes, transport/movement and street connectivity across
various scales and acknowledging the lack thereof.
As a means of responding to the problem identifi ed
above, a set of research techniques is investigated using
a Yeoville/Bellevue, Johannesburg site-specifi c case with
the aim of assisting designers to better apply the evolved
conceptual framework. Simultaneously, the thesis uses
Yeoville/Bellevue as a focus area to illustrate the manner
in which building density, housing and social services,
retailing, land use mixes, transport/movement and street
connectivity can be considered across various scales. This
essentially progresses into the creation of an Urban Design
Framework for Yeoville/Bellevue that strengthens the linkages
between housing and social services, retailing and
transport/movement through using principles of street connectivity,
land use mix and building density creation. An
implementation strategy for the Design Framework is then
established.
Through the execution of the above process the collective
consideration of building density, housing and social services,
retailing, land use mixes, transport/movement and
street connectivity across various scales serves as the basis
for reframing Urban Design to suit developing cities.
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Share issues and repurchases related to equity market timing on the JSEPotgieter, Fahmida 29 January 2016 (has links)
A 50% dissertation presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of
Master of Commerce at the University of Witwatersrand. / Information asymmetry creates a gap between management’s perception of the firm’s value
and the market value of the firm. It is thought that management engage in information
signalling activities in order to close the gap created by information asymmetry.
There is a need to understand why management engage in their chosen transactions as this
will provide investors with insight into market activities, as well as allow for more accurate
investment strategies. While research is available on the market’s reactions to signalling
events, the problem is whether management’s intentions have been correctly interpreted by
the market. The starting point to gaining this understanding is to ask the question: What
signals do management send when they issue and repurchase shares?
This study attempts to answer this question by investigating whether companies listed on the
Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) issue shares because management perceive their market
values to be overvalued and repurchase shares because their market values are undervalued.
For the period 1 January 2003 to 31 December 2012, a total of 295 share issue
announcements are considered for 102 companies; and a total of 183 share repurchase
announcements are considered for 83 companies.
The results of this study reveal that managerial equity market timing may exist in the
presence of excess returns, where management are better able to predict returns in advance
than the market. However, there is also evidence suggesting share repurchases are made to
return excess cash to shareholders and issues and repurchases decisions are linked to capital
structure planning. The fact that there are other potential reasons for share issues and
repurchases, means that the market must be able to determine what the real intentions of
management are when shares are issued and repurchased; and hence determine whether their
intentions suggest equity market mispricing.
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Mindscape: reintegrating institutions, land(scapes) and communities on the Parktown RidgePincus, Lindy Lee January 2016 (has links)
Thesis (M.Arch. (Professional))--University of the Witwatersrand, Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, 2016. / The landscape of Parktown tells a story of possession, dispossession, building and
demolition. This thesis challenges the history of the Parktown ridge as always being
a place that has been associated with hegemony, elitism and uncertainty. Instead,
it asks: Can the ridge become a nurturing environment, a place of ‘meditative
pause’? Can it become a cathartic place that reshapes new territorial orders? In
order to do this, two main contextual issues are explored; institutions and land...
Institutions - Parktown forms a large part of the institutional belt of the city.
However, these institutions lie like an archipelago; they are urban islands that
do not interact with one another. This project challenges and deconstructs the
traditional notion of the institution as being trapped in a modernist paradigm -
caught up in a late modernist definition of health, body and mind that speaks of
authority, control and isolation. The building thus becomes the antithesis of this; it
is an open, permeable structure that becomes a public space.
The programme of the building aims to re-conceive the institutions’ role in the
city. It provides a framework for the currently separated health, education and
business communities of Parktown to interact with one other and cross pollinate
their knowledge in the hope that new transgressive orders will emerge. Being sited
next to the largest institution, the Charlotte Maxeke Hospital, allows it to become
a central gathering space in Parktown and provides the opportunity for the
new structure to start interacting with the hospital. It focuses on the importance
of mental health in two manners; it provides a framework where visitors and
outpatients can deal with their trauma, loss and illness in a holistic environment.
Secondly, it explores the myth that the hospital is a contained object, and looks to
explode the issue of health and allow the hospital to have a reciprocal relationship
with the city. The building becomes a central hub where research experiments are
carried out in the city by citizens to study the mental health of the city.
Land - Parktown lies on the Witwatersrand ridge; the founding and defining
feature of the Witwatersrand. However, the ridge’s narrative of mining has
perhaps remained stagnant and has not evolved after mining. Man has become
disconnected from the land and the project sees the ridge as a device through
which this relationship can be repaired, as the ridge moves into a new generation.
This thesis emerges when architecture is used as the method through which these
two issues, of institutions and land, interrogate and interrupt each other. Harmony
between nature versus geometry is explored, which results in a ‘lyrical brutalist’
style. ‘Land’ or nature is used to humanise the ordered, authoritarian nature of
the institution as it carves itself into the building and fragments and softens the
rigidity of the gridded concrete structure. Symbiotically, the building gives new
importance to the traumatised landscape of the ridge. With nature becoming
such an important part of the building, man is encouraged to reconnect with the
land. The ridge no longer becomes a barrier between the north and the south, but
a connector, bringing communities together.
The intervention becomes a place of refuge, a sanctuary in the modernist
landscape. It is a landscape of re-cognition and encourages one to think more
holistically; to break away from the traditional geometries that have dominated
how we think and have new embodied experiences with the land. In so doing,
the project not only acts as a catalyst in the rehabilitation of the scarred natural
landscape but also speculates on an alternative future for technology, health and
education. It gives a new level of social and cultural significance to the hospital
and surrounding institutions, while reclaiming a land we feel disconnected from.
Key words:
Parktown, ridge, nature, concrete,
land, landscape, institutions, hospital,
education, communities / EM2017
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Effect of co-location in the Johannesburg Securities Exchange (JSE)Sachikonye, Panashe John Lloyd January 2016 (has links)
Thesis (M.M.(Finance & Investment)--University of the Witwatersrand, Faculty of Commerce, Law and Management, Wits Business School, 2016 / Co-location on the JSE took place on the 14th of May 2014. This dissertation looks at
the impact this event has had on the market. In order to measure the effects of colocation,
market quality factors are examined before and after the event to see whether
there were any significant changes. A regression is then undertaken to see the
correlation between co-location, liquidity and volatility. Our results suggest that colocation
benefits market liquidity but we are unable to assess the relationship with
volatility. This means that the growing liquidity in the market can be used to attract
more institutions and firms wishing to run trading algorithms and strategies. Trades
originally meant for dark pools can be now traded on the JSE co-location servers. By
moving trades from dark pools to co-location servers at the JSE and encouraging
institutions to use these facilities, transparency can be increased. Exchanges should
implement kill switches if it is apparent that they are being impaired or flooded with
erroneous orders. The deployment of kill switches, circuit breakers and other system
compliance will improve investor confidence and market stability. Subsequent
research can lead to better understanding by investigating the correlation between colocation
and volatility. / MT 2018
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Abandoned pages _ Unsettled space: an urban dialogue created through literary practice in contemporary DoornfonteinKaskar, Amina 26 May 2015 (has links)
Report submitted to the Faculty of the Built Environment, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Masters in Architecture 2014 / Architecture is the appreciation for story-telling; fiction and literature, history, culture and conversation. It entails the unfolding of a plot, unfamiliar places and eccentric characters. These do not merely exist on dusty old pages in books but are an integral part of our imagination - our subconscious design. This report explores the role of the architect as the reader; and so, this thesis forms what I have ‘read’ this year.
This thesis aims to interpret literature as a design methodology in order to understand site and develop a suitable architectural language. The process of oral traditions, written text and digitalised technology are used to deconstruct systems and principles that document change in architecture and the city.
This project, The Doorn Paperback Project is located in a contested area set within the in-between yard spaces of New Doornfontein. The unsightly nature of the site gives rise to ephemeral slumming. The cracks that exist within the formal urban fabric are atypically inhabited by the marginalised. These hidden narratives of the people living on the site create new meaning to these abandoned and derelict spaces. The way in which people ‘hack’ the site and use it in ways opposed to what was originally intended forms the reality for which the architecture exists. The architecture needs to ‘tear down’ and ‘dismantle’ formal conditions on the site in order to mediate a space in which ‘life’ can be reinvigorated into the space. Thus the introduction of a literary program responds well to the educational and industrial conditions on the site.
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Knowledge, attitudes and practices of health care workers regarding disaster preparedness at Johannesburg hospital in Gauteng Province, South AfricaMoabi, Rosemary Maud 03 November 2009 (has links)
M.P.H., Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, 2008. / The purpose of the study is to ascertain the knowledge, attitudes and practices
of hospital management at the Johannesburg Hospital regarding disaster
preparedness.
Objectives: The study is to assess the current status of awareness of the
management regarding disaster preparedness; to determine whether there are
hospital specific plans; knowledge of whether the plans are regularly updated
or not; to determine attitudes towards disaster management plans and drills
and to determine current practices with regards to disaster preparedness .
Study design: The study design was a cross sectional survey. The study
population included the hospital administrators, head of clinical units, head of
casualties, the chief porter, the chief clerk, the theatre matron, senior sisters
and doctors in the casualty department, head of security, head of transport
and the chief pharmacist
The study was conducted utilizing a self administered questionnaire with
structured and open ended questions. In case where management were not
available, the person acting in that capacity was requested to complete the
questionnaire. Twenty five out of the thirty five managers selected completed
a self administered questionnaire. The response rate was 71,4%.
Findings: The management at the Johannesburg Hospital was aware of the
disaster preparedness of the hospital and its plans, and disaster management
preparedness. Their attitudes to the plans and drill were largely positive.
However, the practices were deficient and work still needs to be done in
regard to ongoing training, performance of drills and the frequency of regular
updating of the plans.
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Coexistence - mixed use development on Louis Botha AvenueHeydenrych, Katherine Mary 07 October 2008 (has links)
No abstract.
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Media and the cityCachucho, Eduardo 01 July 2009 (has links)
No abstract
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Downtown: the experience of memory/retreat/celebrationWright, Eric Charles 14 October 2008 (has links)
No abstract.
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The utilization and outcome of diagnostic, predictive and prenatal genetic testing for Huntington disease in Johannesburg from 1998 to 2006Sizer, Elaine Bernadene 11 May 2009 (has links)
ABSTRACT
Huntington Disease (HD) is a neurodegenerative disorder that is inherited in an autosomal
dominant manner, and for which testing is available. The aim of this retrospective file-based
study was to analyse the numbers and demographics of individuals who had diagnostic,
predictive or prenatal genetic counselling and/or testing for HD between January 1998 and
December 2006 through the Division of Human Genetics, National Health Laboratory
Service and University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg.
Files for 287 individuals who had genetic counselling and/or testing for HD were included in
this study, with 77% being diagnostic cases, 20% predictive and 3% prenatal. When the
results obtained in this study were compared to a study by Kromberg et al. (1999) done
previously in the same Division, it was found that there has been an increase in the number of
diagnostic and predictive tests done per year during this study, with diagnostic tests making
up a greater percentage of the total number of tests performed.
One of the objectives of this study was to characterise the individuals who requested HD
testing and to compare the characteristics of those in the diagnostic testing group to those in
the predictive testing group. The median age of the individuals in the predictive testing group
was 30 years, which was significantly different from the median age of 49 years for
individuals in the diagnostic testing group (p<0.001). It was found that there were
significantly more women than men requesting predictive testing (p=0.02), while the number
of males and females in the diagnostic testing group was similar (p=1.00). There was also a
greater percentage of employed (76.4%) versus unemployed (23.6%) individuals in the
predictive testing group, while the percentages of employed and unemployed individuals in
the diagnostic testing group were similar (45.5% and 54.5% respectively). Significantly more
individuals in the diagnostic testing group had children (74.5%) compared to those in the
predictive testing group, where 44.6% of individuals had one or more children. There was a
greater percentage of white individuals in the predictive testing group (91% white; 3.5%
black) compared to the diagnostic testing group (48% white, 42% black).
The completion rate of the predictive testing process was 66.7%. In the predictive testing
group, 39.5% of individuals tested positive for HD, and in the diagnostic testing group 53% of individuals tested positive for HD. Nine prenatal tests were requested by five different
couples, and 7 tests were performed. Three of these fetuses tested positive for HD (including
a set of twins) and these two pregnancies were terminated.
Overall, there seems to be a lack of awareness of and/or access to the genetic services offered
for HD through the Division of Human Genetics, National Health Laboratory Service and
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, particularly among black individuals and the
professionals treating them. Information generated from this study can be used to understand
the individuals seeking genetic counselling and/or testing for HD better, and can direct efforts
to improve awareness and access amongst groups noted to be under-represented. It also
serves as a starting point for further research.
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