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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.
331

Český Těšín - vzkříšení / Český Těšín - The Ressurection

Jursa, Adam January 2011 (has links)
The aim of my diploma project was to find a concept for a future use of the area between Jablunkovská and Frydecká streets in Český Těšín. My urban design evaluates the potential of an area and allows future expanse of the city. In the detail I focused on a revitalization of the old factory building which has no use for about last 20 years.
332

Opportunities in Liminality: An Inquiry into Museum Narratives and Structures as Catalysts for Culture

Meister, Lauren L. 29 September 2021 (has links)
No description available.
333

What Gate? Gate what? : About Chinese gated communities: historical evolution and characteristic momentums

WANG, QIAO January 2017 (has links)
Since economic liberalization period, Chinese housing typologies have experienced a dramatical change. From the traditional Siheyuan building type to the current gated communities, which prototype has become the most widespread residential housing type in modern China Cities. At the same time, many negative feedbacks about the city life have been appearing, such as traffic congestion, the loss of street vigor and the one side thousand cities phenomenon, etc, of which gated communities prototype is blamed as one of the causes. It seems that the traditional living habits had been overlooked for purpose of solving the population growth. While through the review of Chinese history changes, we could have a comprehensive understanding of the physical evolution and the social change behind it. The gated communities in contemporary China have their particular socio-political evolution process, which could not be explained directly by Western housing theory. And for the consequence, the unique tradition and the living habit, as well as the characteristic momentums during the developing process have a profound influence on the formation of Chinese gated communities, in both conceptual and materialistic way.
334

Energy Savings by Using Daylight for Basic Urban Shapes : With a Case Study of Three Different Street Types

Sundborg, Bengt January 2016 (has links)
During winter the sun is in short supply. But research at KTH shows that solar radiation can be facilitated while energy consumption for lighting is reduced. This provided that the buildings are appropriately designed. But, unfortunately, the sunlight is often not taken into account and the results are the opposite. The energy savings depend on good town planning where the daylight is accessible for longer periods of time during the day, both indoors and outdoors. Then, the periods of use for electric light will decrease. This research is one of the first studies which evaluate the savings in energy with electric lighting due to the use of daylight in urban planning. Three different patterns for street layouts are evaluated and discussed in this report. For example, with straight streets it is possible to save approximately 11 % of the electric energy for the exterior lighting compared to a bending street during twilight.   However, it is possible to improve the daylight distribution with geometrical adjustments even along bending streets. Varying the height of the building along the street front and adding openings between the buildings can make for good daylight distribution, like in the strategic straight line format. The energy efficiency of the bending streets can be improved so the loss in energy efficiency compared to a straight street can be reduced from 11 % to 4 %, in a specific case.   The energy savings are not so great that they alone can justify a specific street type. A number of other factors must also be considered, such as architectural style, uniformity and the building system. A long-term goal is practical guidelines for “better” geometry in urban design, taking into consideration the sun and daylight. The construction cost is not higher in such geometries than in conventional designs, since daylight is free. Therefore daylight can open up for new types of settlements with advantages as more space with more outlooks. / <p>QC 20161028</p>
335

Design project : Caspian Land

TALEB EINOLLAHI, NASTARAN January 2018 (has links)
The Caspian land project attempts to address some problems such as: SHORTAGE OF HOUSING IN STOCKHOLM Creating a well-structured urban area with mix land use: Apartment, row house, semi-detached house, and villa that can address people´s desire to own their home with an economically acceptable price in comparison with similar properties in the city center. SHORTAGE OF TRAFIC &amp; STREET NETWORK This project would also create a well-functioning street network inside the proposed project. ECONOMICAL PRICING • Providing housing for residents with the various budget , with focus on low and medium income residents. • Establish cheaper private housing in comparison with similar housing in the city center. •Creating a hybrid and multifunctional urban area with a commercial base( like the proposed shopping center) that can encourage financial sponsors to invest in this proposed project. SUSTAINABILITY CONCERNS • Creating a walkable urban area with a high-quality walking path that would encourage people to walk or cycle to commute. •Offering an opportunity to residents for utilizing urban gardening to provide a small part of residents`daily vegetable needs. • Providing an opportunity for people, especially elderly and children, to spend more time in nature.
336

Historically-Informed Development in the Civic Center South Area of Downtown Los Angeles

Von Kerczek, John Daniel 01 June 2012 (has links) (PDF)
The site of today’s Civic Center in Downtown Los Angeles evolved gradually over the course of over 150 years before being dramatically transformed in the early to mid 20th century. Understanding how this area evolved and was redeveloped can help guide efforts to restore physical and historical continuity throughout the area. Specifically, this historical understanding can assist in identifying key opportunity sites within the area, such as Civic Center South, and in setting urban design goals for new development. Research for this thesis included an analysis of the area’s historic development and a review of its current conditions. The historical analysis examined how the study area initially developed and how it was subsequently transformed through redevelopment. The review of current conditions examined recent and proposed development in and around the Civic Center South site and recent policies and regulations that are guiding new development within Downtown Los Angeles. This study ultimately provides an overview of the historic development context of the north end of Downtown Los Angeles as well as a review of the developments and regulations influencing development within that area today.
337

Exkluderande design i Karlstad centrum : En undersökning om urban design och exkluderande effekter / Exclusionary design in central Karlstad : A study on urban design and exclusionary effects

Jansson, Sebastian, Svensson, David January 2024 (has links)
Denna uppsats syftar till att undersöka om det finns exempel i Karlstad centrum som kan tyda på exkluderande design. Detta görs utifrån de två frågeställningarna: Vilka exempel på exkluderande design finns i Karlstad centrum? Vad i den urbana designen i Karlstad centrum skulle kunna missgynna olika grupper och i så fall vilka? Det empiriska materialet har samlats in genom observationer och denna empirin som har samlats in ska hjälpa till att besvara frågeställningarna. Uppsatsen utgår ifrån Fredrik Edins och Robert Rosenbergers teorier om exkluderande design men även Henri Lefebvres begrepp rätten till staden berättat utifrån Helena Holgerssons avhandling. Teorierna har använts i syfte att tolka den urbana designen i Karlstad centrum. Utifrån dessa teorier gick det att finna att olika designer i Karlstad Centrum kan medföra exkluderande effekter mot vissa grupper. Det går däremot inte att tydligt avgöra avsikten av dessa designer. / This essay looks to study if there are examples of design elements that can indicate exclusionary design in central Karlstad. This will be conducted using two questions: What examples of exclusionary design can be found in central Karlstad? What in the urban design in central Karlstad can act exclusionary against different groups and if so, against who? The empirical material has been collected using observations and this empirical material seeks to help answer the two questions. The essay engages the theories of Fredrik Edin and Robert Rosenberger on exclusionary design as well as Henri Lefebvre’s concept of the right to the city as told in Helena Holgersson’s thesis. The theories have been used to interpret the urban design found in central Karlstad. Using these theories we found that different designs in central Karlstad can entail exclusionary effects against certain groups. We can not however clearly determine the intention behind these designs.
338

Renovation and Renewal of Harbour Area in Helsingborg / Renovering och förnyelse av hamnområdet i Helsingborg

Wang, Wei January 2020 (has links)
The project site in Helsingborg is located on a pier in a harbour area in Öresund, in Sweden’s southernmost province of Skåne. Helsingborg is Sweden’s eighth largest city. It is a densely built urban city, with a large former port area under redevelopment. The project site covers an old warehouse building - Magasin 405, and its surrounding plot. The goal is to re-use and repurpose the warehouse into a attractive meeting place in the city, while adding building volumes and public space to accommodate public activities and housing units within the project site. The new proposal is aiming to revatalize the waterfront area of Oceanhamnen (the Ocean Harbour) and help connect the segregated neighbourhoods ’North’ and ’South’ (”Norr” and ”Söder”) of the city centre. The renovation of Magasin 405 will make the waterfront district, and the city as a whole,more dynamic.
339

Urban Bridging: Unite Cincinnati's Fragmented Downtown Through Urban Design

Mohsenianrad, Neda January 2016 (has links)
No description available.
340

Returning Dead Mall Sites to Vitality through Age-in-Place Design

Hare, Sean M. 19 September 2017 (has links)
No description available.

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