8 resultados para Saint Kitts and Nevis
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Resumo:
John Summerson, en El Lenguaje Clásico de la Arquitectura, defiende que los órdenes clásicos que empleaban los arquitectos romanos para decorar sus edificios, no tienen una función estructural pero hacen expresivos a los edificios. Les hacen hablar. Arthur Schopenhauer afirma que “el destino de la Bella Arquitectura es poner de manifiesto la lucha entre el peso y la rigidez de los elementos estructurales”. Y Auguste Perret define la Arquitectura como “el arte de hacer cantar al punto de apoyo”. El objetivo de esta Tesis Doctoral es profundizar en la capacidad de expresión de la estructura. A través del estudio de las estructuras históricas, que se realiza en la primera parte de la Tesis, podemos concluir que existen tres categorías, tres maneras de expresión de la Estructura. Estructuras Vistas, que hablan, Estructuras Ocultas, que se esconden y Estructuras Ilusorias, que fingen. El Partenón y la Sainte Chapelle de París se estudian en el apartado de Estructuras Vistas. El Panteón, el Palacio de Carlos V, la Catedral de San Pablo en Londres, y otras arquitecturas renacentistas y romanas, en el apartado de Estructuras Ocultas. Y como Estructuras Ilusorias, la Alhambra (Dos Hermanas, Comares, el Patio de los Leones), Santa Sofía, y otras arquitecturas del barroco italiano. En la segunda parte de la Tesis se analiza la obra completa de Mies van der Rohe desde el punto de vista de esas tres categorías. Lo visto, lo oculto y lo ilusorio en las estructuras de Mies. Se estudia la evolución en la estructura de la casa, desde las primeras casas con Estructura Oculta de muro de ladrillo, hasta las últimas casas con Estructura Vista y columnas adelantadas, pasando por una etapa intermedia de casas con estructura mixta de muro de ladrillo en la que el acero comienza a hacer su aparición. Se analizan también seis soluciones estructurales en los Bloques y en las Torres: Estructura Vista reverberante, expresiva o inexpresiva vs Estructura Oculta con vestido horizontal, vestido reticular o vestido vertical. Y por último, se estudian las tres soluciones de Estructura Ilusoria que emplea Mies en sus Pabellones. La metodología de trabajo que se ha empleado se divide en cuatro apartados: El análisis bibliográfico; el análisis in situ de los edificios, que nos permite comprobar, por ejemplo, los efectos lumínicos de la columna acanalada del Partenón, o el efecto reverberante de las columnas de la Weissenhofsiedlung; el análisis crítico de planos y detalles constructivos, que nos lleva a concluir que la disposición de pantallas del Pabellón de Barcelona anula la lectura de la crujía estructural, y que la columna del restaurante Cantor se dispone con su alma perpendicular a la cercha, y no paralela, como cabría suponer si se quisiera aprovechar toda la capacidad portante del perfil en H; y por último, el análisis numérico y estructural, que nos lleva a confirmar el sobredimensionado de la Estructura del Patio de los Leones de la Alhambra o el sobredimensionado de la Estructura de la Casa Farnsworth. Lo que se confirma con esta Tesis Doctoral es que la Estructura es algo más, mucho más, que sólo transmisión de las cargas. ABSTRACT John Summerson, in The Classic Language of Architecture, argues that the classic orders used by Roman architects in the decoration of their buildings did not have a structural function, but made buildings expressive. They make them speak. Arthur Schopenhauer affirms that “the goal of Great Architecture is to highlight the struggle between the gravity and rigidity of structural elements”. And Auguste Perret defines Architecture as “the art of making the points of support sing”. The objective of this Doctoral Thesis is to examine the expressive capacity of structure. Following a study of historic structures in the first part of the thesis, we conclude that three categories exist, three ways of expressing Structure. Visible Structures that speak, Concealed Structures that are hidden and Illusory Structures that pretend. The Parthenon and the Sainte Chapelle in Paris are studied in the section on Visible Structures. The Pantheon, the Palace of Charles V, Saint Paul’s Cathedral in London, and other Renaissance and Roman architectures are dealt with in the Concealed Structures section. And, as examples of Illusory Structures, we focus on the Alhambra (The Hall of the Two Sisters, the Comares and the Court of the Lions), Saint Sophia, and other Italian Baroque architectures. In the second part of the Thesis the complete work of Mies van der Rohe is analysed from the perspective of these three categories. The visible, the concealed and the illusory, in the structures of Mies. We study how the structure of the house evolves, from the first houses with the Hidden Structure of the brick wall, to the later houses with Visible Structures and columns, via an intermediate phase of mixed-structure houses with brick walls, where steel first began to make its appearance. We also analyse six structural solutions in the Blocks and Towers: reverberant, expressive or inexpressive Visible Structure vs Concealed Structure with horizontal cladding, reticular cladding or vertical cladding. And finally, we look at the three Illusory Structure solutions that Mies employs in his Pavilions. The methodology employed is divided into four sections: a bibliographic analysis; an analysis in situ of the buildings, which allows us to test, for example, the lighting effects of the fluted column in the Parthenon, or the reverberant effect of the Weissenhofsiedlung columns; a critical analysis of plans and constructive details, which leads us to conclude that the arrangement of panels in the Barcelona Pavilion cancels out the structural centreline, and that the column in the Cantor restaurant is placed with its web perpendicular to the truss, and not parallel to it, as one might expect if one wanted to avail of all the load-bearing capacity of the H beam; and lastly, a numeric and structural analysis, which confirms the oversizing of the Court of the Lions structure in the Alhambra or the oversized structure of Farnsworth House. All of which confirms in this Doctoral Thesis that structure is something more, much more, than a mere conveyor of loads.
Resumo:
The vault of the sacristy of the Cathedral of Saint-Jean Baptiste in Perpignan (France), constructed by the Majorcan architect Guillem Sagrera between 1433 and 1447, is an outstanding, yet strikingly unknown, example of rib vaulting. This paper analyzes the overall construction of the form of the vault, characterized by its highly irregular perimeter, with particular attention to an isolated decorated corbel which solves the problem of the wall support of a group of six ribs and is in stark contrast with the rest of the supports, which are completely unadorned. Given the extreme rigour of Sagrera in all his works (and this one in particular), this apparent “capriccio” must be justified not only by decorative or formal requirements, but also by the constructive logic of Gothic vaulting system
Resumo:
Outline: • Introduction • Process Experimental Setup • Experimental Procedure • Experimental Results for Al2024-T351 and Ti6Al4V - Residual stresses - Tensile Strength - Fatigue Life • Discussion and Outlook - Prospects for technological applications of LSP
Resumo:
In this paper some mathematical programming models are exposed in order to set the number of services on a specified system of bus lines, which are intended to assist high demand levels which may arise because of the disruption of Rapid Transit services or during the celebration of massive events. By means of this model two types of basic magnitudes can be determined, basically: a) the number of bus units assigned to each line and b) the number of services that should be assigned to those units. In these models, passenger flow assignment to lines can be considered of the system optimum type, in the sense that the assignment of units and of services is carried out minimizing a linear combination of operation costs and total travel time of users. The models consider delays experienced by buses as a consequence of the get in/out of the passengers, queueing at stations and the delays that passengers experience waiting at the stations. For the case of a congested strategy based user optimal passenger assignment model with strict capacities on the bus lines, the use of the method of successive averages is shown.
Resumo:
El convento de la Tourette se concibe en un marco temporal concreto. Sin embargo sería erróneo limitarse a él a la hora de intentar desentrañar las claves del proyecto y llegar a un entendimiento completo del mismo. Es necesario analizarlo atendiendo al conjunto global de la producción del arquitecto, la cual ha ido forjando una forma propia de hacer que condicionará en gran medida las decisiones tomadas en cada momento. Esta tesis realiza una investigación de doble sentido (recogida en los dos volúmenes que la componen). Por un lado analiza el proceso evolutivo en el que se enhebra la obra intentando desentrañar la influencia de aquel en ésta, pero por otro, invirtiendo el sentido, también desvela ciertas claves de la arquitectura de Le Corbusier a través del preciso análisis de proyecto de la Tourette. Pero aún más, la pertenencia del convento de la Tourette al “tipo monacal” introduce la presencia de un tiempo histórico “ab origine, in hillo tempore” del que la investigación se hace eco. Un tiempo al que Le Corbusier siempre volverá la mirada, y que en este caso se encuentra muy presente, determinando el devenir del proyecto de una forma particular y definitiva. Por tanto este trabajo pretende convocar los dos tiempos que conviven en el proyecto del convento de la Tourette, el corto, concreto y cerrado de su génesis y desarrollo, que se circunscribe al periodo de proyecto comprendido entre los años 1953 y 1956, y el más dilatado, abstracto y abierto, que enlaza el proyecto con la producción de Le Corbusier, y aún más atrás, con el tiempo histórico. En la primera parte del trabajo (A. “PROYECTO”) se realiza un análisis cronológico de la documentación gráfica ‐incluyendo su re‐dibujo‐ y escrita del proyecto, desde los croquis que el arquitecto esboza en su primera visita al valle del Turdine hasta el documento final del project d’exécution, a partir del cual se materializará la obra. El objetivo de la investigación no es describir la realidad construida, sino participar del secreto de su génesis analizando y intentando comprender los dibujos o el pensamiento de sus creadores. Frente a la multitud de escritos sobre la obra del convento de la Tourette el foco de atención de la tesis se centra en el proyecto. Es en esta fase de elaboración y desarrollo de las ideas, previa a la acción de construir, donde pensamos que La deriva de la propia actividad del arquitecto avala esta decisión. A lo largo de su carrera Le Corbusier va reduciendo progresivamente su presencia en la obra centrándose cada vez más en las fases de la concepción y proyecto arquitectónico. Considera que en ellas se produce lo “esencial” mientras que deja las decisiones de obra en manos de sus colaboradores y de los diversos “operadores”, participando tan solo en el visto bueno final de las mismas (esta posición contrasta con la entrega de los constructores para quienes el arquitecto encarna la innovación tecnológica). En la Tourette realiza exclusivamente tres visitas de obra en las que actúa como un mero escenógrafo, ajustando aquí y allá pequeñas decisiones de la construcción. Esta distancia refuerza su posición en el proceso y subraya su búsqueda de un ideal teórico desarrollado sobre todo en la fase de proyecto frente a lo subsidiario de la realidad práctica. En la segunda parte de la tesis, denominada “RE‐VISIONES”, se abre el campo de acción a otras facetas de la ingente actividad de Le Corbusier como la pintura, la escritura o incluso la escultura; una nueva MIRADA bajo el prisma de una serie de conceptos‐llave recurrentes en su Petit vocabulaire (l’homme, la céllule, la bôite, l’organisme). Se amplía, por tanto, el marco temporal, repasando de modo genérico y transversal la evolución de los mismos en la trayectoria del arquitecto, comprobándose como el convento de la Tourette es un eslabón característico y clave en todos ellos. ABSTRACT The Convent of La Tourette is conceived in a specific time frame. However, it would be erroneous to limit oneself simply to this when trying to unravel the keys to the project and to fully understand it. It is necessary to analyse the project attending to the entire production of the architect, who progressively shaped his own way of doing things which would condition to a large extent the decisions taken at each point in time. This thesis carries out its research in a dual sense (brought together in both its volumes). On the one hand, it analyses the development process threading the work attempting to fathom the influence of the former on the latter but, on the other hand, inverting the sense which also reveals certain keys to the architecture of Le Corbusier by means of a detailed analysis of the project for La Tourette. Even more so, the Convent of La Tourette belonging to the “monastic type” introduces the presence of a historical period “ab origine, in hillo tempore" reflected in the research. A period to which Le Corbusier would always look back on and which is extremely present in this case, determining the evolution of the project in a particular and definitive manner. Therefore, this piece of work attempts to bring together both time periods co‐existing in the project for the Convent of La Tourette, the short, specific and closed one regarding its genesis development, encompassing the project period going from 1953 to 1956, and the broader, more abstract and open one linking the project with the production by Le Corbusier, and even further back, with the historical period. The first part of this work (A. “PROJECT") performs a chronological analysis of the graphic – including its re‐drawing –and written documentation of the project, from the outlines the architect sketched in his first visit to the Turdine valley up to the final document of the project d’exécution from which the works would materialise. The main object of the investigation is not intend to describe the reality constructed, but to participate in the secret of its genesis, analysing and trying to understand the drawings or the thoughts of its creators. As opposed to the many writings on the work of the Convent of La Tourette, the attention of this thesis focusses on the project. It is in this preparation and development stage, previous to the construction action, where it is believed the real keys to understand and explain it lie. The enormous work collecting, ordering and analysing the abundant graphic and written information reveals “a multidirectional process, full of regrets and securities, errors and certainties, leaps backwards and tremendous foresight in the process” directed not only by the conditions of the assignment, but also by the way of doing things of Le Corbusier and his collaborator I. Xenakis. A web of hidden relationships is weaved in this open space of the process, often distant in time, allowing us to draw a new route, not only towards the constructed works of the Convent of La Tourette, but towards understanding his entire production. It is in the creation of this new path of knowledge, and not only in its conclusion, where the “thesis” acquires its true meaning. In second place, the drift in the actual activity of the architect backs this decision. Throughout his career, Le Corbusier progressively reduced his presence on site, focussing more and more on the conception and architectural project stages. He considered that which was “essential” took place in these, while leaving the on‐site decisions to his collaborators and the different “operators”, only participating in their final approval (this position is in contrast with the delivery by the constructors for whom the architect embodies the technological innovation). In La Tourette he exclusively made three on‐site visits, in which acted as a pure stage designer, adjusting small construction decisions here and there. This distance reinforces his position in the process and underlines his search for a theoretical ideal developed primarily in the project stage as opposed to that which is secondary of the practical reality. The second part of the thesis, called “RE‐VISIONS”, widens the scope of action to other aspects of the huge activity by Le Corbusier, encompassing painting, writing or even sculpture; a new VIEW under the prism of a series of recurrent key concepts in his Petit vocabulaire (l’homme, la céllule, la bôite, l’organisme). The time frame is therefore extended, revising in a generic and transversal manner the development of these concepts throughout the career of Le Corbusier, confirming how the Convent of La Tourette is a characteristic and key link to each of them.
Resumo:
The Chinchón Saint Claire Convent is a Count Foundation of 1653. Some repair works were made around 1965, but some important cracks were remained. This paper describes the soil study made to know, its properties, the reason of these movements and its consequences to the convent and the repair works done. A high swelling phenomenon has been detected. The convent is on a high plasticity clayey soil with soil sandy insertions. The soil water has a high content of sulphates. In addition, some sewer system piping was broken around the convent and frequently flooded the convent crypt. A micropiles underpinning was made and the water leaked has lead to the sewer system to avoid the crypt flooding, also a drainage system has been made and the ground around the church has been paved.
Resumo:
Fast-fashion retailers and mass production dominate the fashion and apparel industry. Increased globalization, labor intensity and outsourcing to developing countries are fostering the interest in sustainability within the industry. There is a growth of a new movement attempting to offset the demand for fast fashion, "Slow Fashion" movement. Slow fashion is not time-based but quality-based approach in which designers, buyers, retailers and consumers are more aware of the impacts on workers, communities and ecosystems (Fletcher 2007). European Union has also some critical targets to reach by 2020. Spain, specifically, has to meet some requirements in terms of economy and sustainability. This exploratory study analyzed how slow fashion concept, precisely manufacturing locally, could improve economic development. Local manufacturing, its impact on economic development and the challenges of Spanish market are illustrated through a case study of one Spanish fashion brand, Saint Brissant.
Resumo:
"Slow Fashion" attempts to offset the demand for fast fashion and mass production (Fletcher, 2007). Consumers' response to sustainability-based practices is a limited discourse and studies for slow fashion concept are scarce. This study thus aims to enlighten the subject of how slow fashion concept could improve local economies and how Spanish consumers respond to such initiatives. This paper is based on an exploratory qualitative research for which focus group interviews including three group discussions with Spanish consumers were held. The data was examined by constant comparison analysis to present consumer insights. Moreover, a case study was conducted with a Spanish apparel brand. Saint Brissant was chosen since it manufactures in Spain to (i) ensure its products? high quality and (ii) to empower Spanish economy. This paper provides empirical insights. Even though local manufacturing was perceived to have a higher quality, Spanish consumers? behavioural intentions of using local brands were not high.Self-interest, mainly price and design, was recorded as the most influential purchase criteria. Furthermore, Saint Brissant case demonstrated that local manufacturing could boost local economies by creating workforce. However, governmental subsidies should be rearranged and consumers? perceptions should be improved to support local manufacturers in Spain.