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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

Sport and the Victorian city : the development of commercialised spectator sport, Bradford 1836-1908

Pendleton, David January 2015 (has links)
This study is a history of popular spectator sport in the city of Bradford between the years 1836 and 1908. Its major aim is to chart and analyse the experience of Bradford in relation to the national development of sport in the modern city and how spectator sport, in particular, helped shape personal and civic identities in a bourgeoning industrial community. This project builds on a growing body of work on the development of sport and leisure in British towns and cities during the nineteenth century. Furthermore, it will both complement earlier studies on sport in Bradford and West Yorkshire and add to our understanding of how urban sporting and leisure cultures were forged through a combination of national trends and local economic and social peculiarities. The emergence of a national sporting culture ran parallel with an exponential acceleration in urbanisation, the adoption of the factory system, regularised working hours and growth in disposable income. Bradford’s sporting culture, however, was also a product of the city’s shifting social structures, which had been shaped by its unique economy. As a consequence, Bradford also played a significant role in determining the national sporting culture as well as reflecting wider trends. Bradford’s move from an essentially pre-industrial sporting landscape towards a recognisably modern one took place over a period of little more than fifty years. However, it will be shown that this was an uneven process. In challenging Malcolmson’s ‘leisure vacuum’ theory, it will be argued that Bradford’s sporting culture exhibited as much continuity as change. Pre-modern sporting practices, such as the game of knur and spell (presented here as a case study), for example, overlapped with the emergence of codified team sports. Nevertheless, the changes that were wrought in the second half of the nineteenth century were significant and lasting as an increasingly assertive working class had more time and money to spend on leisure. The thesis not only examines and charts how the development of cricket, soccer and rugby within the city were subject to changing economic and cultural contexts, but, especially through an analysis of the switch from rugby to soccer of both Manningham FC and Bradford FC, how agency was a crucial factor in bringing about historical change.
2

Narratives of Manchester pedestrianism : using biographical methods to explore the development of athletics during the nineteenth century

Oldfield, Samantha-Jayne January 2014 (has links)
The British sporting landscape significantly altered during the nineteenth century as industrialisation affected the leisure patterns of the previously rural communities that were now residents of the urban city. As both space and time available for sport reduced, traditional pastimes continued to survive amid the numerous public houses that had emerged within, and in, the outskirts of Britain’s major industrial centres. Land attached to, and surrounding, the more rural taverns was procured for sporting purposes, with specially built stadia developed and publicans becoming gatekeepers to these working-class pursuits. Pedestrianism, the forerunner to modern athletics, became a lucrative commercial enterprise, having been successfully integrated into the urban sporting model through public house endorsement. The sporting publicans, especially within the city, used entrepreneurial vision to transform these activities into popular athletic “shows” with these professional athletes demonstrating feats of endurance, speed and strength, all under the regulation of the sporting proprietor. In Manchester, areas such as Newton Heath developed their own communities for pedestrianism and, through entrepreneurial innovation and investment, the Oldham Road became a hotspot for athletic competition throughout much of the nineteenth century. Within these communities, there was a reliance on the individual to cultivate and maintain athletic interest through their endorsement and promotion of, and their continued investment in, sporting entertainment. The relationship between entrepreneurial sportsmen and public houses has long been noted and there are abundant examples of individuals who combined their sporting activities with the role of licensee, but these are usually limited in scope and are overtly descriptive narratives that do little beyond documenting the individual achievements of their subjects. The traditional biographical method, whereby individual profiles are constructed through the uncovering of historical detail, is normally employed within the sport history discipline but this requires re-evaluation if a more complete picture of sport is to be established. Further biographical methods, such as collective biography and prosopography, whereby individuals are collectively studied through more measured techniques, should be applied to give further analysis of the impact of individuals within a specific sporting environment. This study uses all three approaches, biography, prosopography and collective biography, to give a more nuanced narrative that uncovers the changing nature of pedestrianism within nineteenth-century Manchester. Each chapter utilises a different biographical approach to explore a unique aspect of Manchester pedestrianism and gives further recognition to the previously anonymous population that helped to create a diverse hub for athletic entertainment. Although several themes permeate all three narratives, each method has its own outcomes, which provide alternative interpretations and perspectives on Manchester’s sporting history. Whilst pedestrianism is used as an exemplar, the study intends to highlight the importance of the individual, as opposed to national organisations, in telling the story of nineteenth-century sport.
3

Where the Sidewalk Begins: Pedestrian Accessibility Analysis in Suburban Cincinnati

Goodwin, Justin M. January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
4

Interchange Intervention: Inhabiting Urban Highway Infrastructure

Ashraf, Mohammed Imtiaz 18 November 2013 (has links)
Urban highway infrastructure in North America has been singularly designed for the automobile, severing parts of the urban fabric, blighting our once-thriving city centres and resulting in spaces that are void of the human scale. The Cogswell Interchange in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada is such an infrastructure, cutting through the downtown core and heritage district. This thesis investigates the Cogswell Interchange in an attempt to animate and enliven a dead urban space, reducing traffic and bringing new activity and life to the street. Reappropriating parts of vehicular infrastructure for cyclist and pedestrian use and creating a variety of activities and programs (gallery, gym, restaurant, park) enables an increased connectivity for pedestrians and cyclists and brings a more human-scale urbanity to the site. The infrastructure itself becomes a framework upon which to build, revisioned as an active, vibrant place which people can experience with a renewed sense of wonder and appreciation.
5

Acessibilidade e mobilidade na orla marírtima de João Pessoa: uma análise qualitativa nos espaços livres de circulação da orla dos bairros Manaíra e Tambaú

Rodrigues, Nadia Freitas 30 March 2006 (has links)
Made available in DSpace on 2015-05-14T12:09:46Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 arquivototal.pdf: 2079328 bytes, checksum: a4dd8604acb7f72e4ceeb21529764d09 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2006-03-30 / Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nível Superior - CAPES / On this work, it is done an analysis quant-qualitative of the urban environment for pedestrians pointing the accessibility, where were considered aspects such as mobility and users degree of satisfaction, besides the registers of accidence risks. Two methodologies were used, where the first one evaluates basically the sidewalk; and, the second one does a larger analysis of the urban environment. The object of study is an urban area of the city of João Pessoa, more precisely, the maritime edge of the quarters of Manaíra and Tambaú, where the landscape and the use of the soil marked by mixed activities attract tourists and intensify the flux of pedestrians. Tourists and residents of this city were interviewed to know the longings of all users of this urban environment. The results obtained from the two analyses were similar, even though they have different methods and indicators; and the final result of each one is compatible with the reality of the evaluated local. It was verified that the conditions of the environment available for the pedestrians, mostly in the maritime edge, are not satisfactory, where the vacant spaces of circulation can be considered inaccessible for not offering conditions of safe access and with autonomy for all people; existing thus, great necessity of adjustment of sidewalks which were evaluated to reach greater satisfaction of users. / Neste trabalho, é feita uma análise quanti-qualitativa do ambiente urbano para pedestres enfocando a acessibilidade, onde foram considerados aspectos como mobilidade e grau de satisfação dos usuários, além de registros acidentários. Duas metodologias foram utilizadas. A primeira é a de Ferreira e Sanches (1998) que avalia basicamente a calçada; e, a segunda faz uma análise mais abrangente do ambiente urbano, realizada através do Método e Técnica de Intervenção Ergonomizadora, através da Análise Sistêmica do Sistema Humano-Tarefa- Máquina de Moraes (2000), adaptado ao Sistema Humano-Espaço Urbano de Baptista (2001). O objeto de estudo é uma área urbana da cidade de João Pessoa, mais precisamente, a orla marítima dos bairros Manaíra e Tambaú, onde a paisagem e o uso do solo marcado por atividades mistas atraem turistas, intensificando o fluxo de pedestres. Turistas e moradores desta cidade foram entrevistados para conhecer os anseios de todos os usuários deste ambiente urbano. Os resultados obtidos das duas análises são semelhantes, apesar de possuírem métodos e indicadores diferentes; e o resultado final de cada uma é compatível com a realidade do local avaliado. Constatou-se que as condições do ambiente disponível para os pedestres, em grande parte da orla marítima, não são satisfatórias, onde os espaços livres de circulação podem ser considerados inacessíveis por não oferecerem condições de acesso seguro e com autonomia para todas as pessoas; havendo assim, grande necessidade de adequação das calçadas que foram avaliadas para alcançar maior satisfação dos usuários.
6

Examining the Ecological and Social Implications of Parklets and Plazas Across Multiple Urban Scales

Muller, Joshua L 01 June 2021 (has links) (PDF)
Faced with population increases but stagnant capital improvements and impacts from global warming, cities around the world are experimenting with smaller-scale and cheaper strategies in order to accommodate the new influx of residents. New York City has led the way in converting low-efficiency intersection space into public plazas with a limited range of permanently installed elements and San Francisco has pioneered the concept of the parklet, which converts two to four street parking spaces into a modular and flexible pedestrian space. I seek to answer two questions about these spaces: What are common factors influencing the viability and successful implementation of parklets and public plaza? And what are the social and environmental outcomes of constructing parklets and public plazas at a site-specific level and across larger urban scales? Previous research has examined the dynamics and components of public spaces in cities. This research builds upon previous research efforts. By answering these questions, cities and communities seeking to create more pedestrian-friendly and human-oriented space have insights into the components that make parklets and public plazas work and what impacts these developments can have throughout their built environment. I conducted theoretical research of scholarly works concerning urban ecology, resilience, and the social components of cities, and conducted structured observations of plazas and parklets and appropriate control sites in New York City and San Francisco. At a site-specific scale, these developments promote a diverse range of uses and can serve as localized nodes. Across larger scales, these developments can use design considerations to change the perception of an area or neighborhood and have the potential to create a linked system that provides widespread circulatory and ecological improvements. Creating programs that facilitate parklet installations and plaza conversions give cities and communities the most bang for their buck because they provide flexible spaces that do not involve major and expensive capital improvements. Parklets and public plazas are viable projects for providing green space and promoting pedestrian circulation within neighborhoods and communities.
7

Beautiful Day. Pleasant Walk: Walking and Landscape in the Works of Eswick Evans, John D. Godman, Elizabeth Fries Ellet, and Bradford Torrey

Honeycutt, Scott R 05 May 2012 (has links)
Throughout the nineteenth century, walking for leisure and for spiritual endeavor in America correlated with the rise of literary romanticism. This burgeoning fashion of pedestrian travel, coupled with an impulse to experience the ever expanding nation, spawned a new and enduring subgenre in American letters – the walking text. Many scholars consider Henry David Thoreau and John Muir to be the century’s greatest literary amblers and naturalists; while their catalogs of walking literature are foundational, they are not exclusive. “Beautiful Day. Pleasant Walk: Walking and Landscape in Works of Estwick Evans, John D. Godman, Elizabeth Fries Ellet, and Bradford Torrey” aims to establish the importance of several underappreciated nineteenth century American pedestrians and landscapes. In addition to analyzing the development and importance of walking texts throughout the century, this dissertation also considers the geographies over which the authors traveled. The northern grounds of Ohio’s forgotten Great Black Swamp (Evans) and Philadelphia’s bucolic Wissahickon Creek (Godman), team with the southern worlds of rural Antebellum landscapes (Ellet) and Civil War battlefields (Torrey) to create a compelling map of nineteenth century America. Finally, through first-hand, authorial accounts this study discusses each terrain’s historical contexts as well as their current conditions.

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