994 resultados para Altarpieces -- Spain -- Zamora


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El Camino de Santiago, ha experimentado un crecimiento exponencial, durante los últimos años, llegando a triplicarse el número de peregrinos. Esto se ha traducido en la necesidad de aumentar el número de albergues a lo largo del Camino de Santiago. Por otro lado, nos encontramos con que reducir la demanda energética y las emisiones de CO2 son algunos de los principales retos que se plantea la arquitectura actual, para cumplir los objetivos marcados por la Unión Europea en el 2020, 2030 y 2050. Surge por tanto el proceso de la rehabilitación energética, como la opción más lógica y viable para comenzar a hablar de posibles soluciones a un problema global (búsqueda de construcciones más eficaces y sostenibles) solventando a su vez una problemática concreta (creciente demanda de albergues de peregrinos). La ruta concreta seleccionada como marco para llevar a cabo el análisis ha sido la de la Vía de la Plata, hilo conductor de historia a través de nuestro país y conexión natural entre las distintas zonas climáticas españolas (mediterránea, continental y atlántica). Para ello, cuatro ciudades han sido seleccionadas como objeto de análisis: Sevilla, Cáceres, Zamora y Santiago de Compostela. El objetivo central de esta investigación ha sido la selección y análisis de una serie de estrategias para la rehabilitación energética de los albergues de la Vía de Plata. Estas estrategias han sido clasificadas atendiendo al nivel de reforma arquitectónica (bajo, medio y alto), tipo de contexto (urbano y rural), propiedades de la envolvente, proporción y orientación de los huecos y la morfología del edificio. Se ha planteado como hipótesis de trabajo que, bajo los criterios bioclimáticos adecuados, y atendiendo a unas necesidades de confort ajustadas al uso transitorio de los albergues, su demanda energética podría verse reducida en algunas de las regiones climáticas españolas analizadas, dependiendo de la estrategia seleccionada. Se ha obtenido en total una casuística de más de 600 potenciales escenarios, que ha permitido obtener una visión global del funcionamiento de los albergues a lo largo de la península, atendiendo a diferentes parámetros, principalmente enfocados en torno a criterios de confort, demanda energética y emisiones de CO2. Como tendencia general, los albergues de la mitad más septentrional, presentan menores niveles de demanda energética y emisiones de CO2 en contextos urbanos, teniendo un gran impacto en su funcionamiento las estrategias planteadas. Esta tendencia se invierte en la zona sur de la península, representada en este caso por Cáceres y Sevilla, donde las demandas son más elevados, siendo especialmente sensibles al aumento de área de hueco y las consiguientes ganancias solares. En el contexto rural serán Zamora y Santiago las que presenten niveles de demanda energética más elevados, mientras que Cáceres y Sevilla presentan los niveles más elevados de emisiones de CO2, por su demanda predominante de refrigeración, directamente relacionada con el consumo eléctrico de los albergues. El conjunto de resultados obtenidos ha servido para analizar, a diferentes escalas y con distintos enfoques, el funcionamiento de las estrategias de rehabilitación energética propuestas, para cada una de las regiones climáticas seleccionadas. ABSTRACT Saint James Way has experienced a huge increase over the last years, reaching values up to three times higher than fifteen years ago. Therefore, the need for more hostels for the pilgrims has become an issue. On the other hand, reducing the energy demand and CO2 emissions within the built environment is one of the main challenges of current architecture, in order to achieve the proposed targets for 2020, 2030 and 2050 by the European Union. In this context, energy refurbishment shows up as the most logical and viable option, to discuss about potential solutions for global concerns (more sustainable and efficient constructions) solving at the same time particular issues (growing demand of pilgrim´s hostels). The selected route to undertake this analysis is known as “Vía de la Plata”, historical connection from the South to the North of Spain and a natural link among the different climate zones (Mediterranean, continental and atlantic). The four cities selected for the analysis as the most representatives of this route were; Sevilla, Cáceres, Zamora and Santiago de Compostela. The final target of this research was to select and analyse certain strategies for the energy refurbishment of the hostels on the mentioned Way. These strategies were classified according to the level of architectural refurbishment (low, medium or high), type of context (urban or rural), properties of the envelope, proportion and orientation of the windows and the morphology of the building. The hypothesis of the research is based on the believe that, under the right environmental criteria and with comfort levels adjusted to the transient type of use of the hostels, the energy demand could be reduced in some of the analysed climate regions, depending on the selected strategies. Six hundred potential scenarios were assessed, what allowed for a general vision on the hostels performance throughout the country, according to different parameters, focused on comfort criteria, energy demands and CO2 emissions. As a general trend, the hostels on the northern part of Spain show lower levels of energy demand and CO2 emissions in urban contexts, with a great impact of the proposed strategies on reducing the original demands. This trend is reversed on the South (Cáceres and Seville), were demands are higher, specially with greater glazing ratios. Hostels in the countryside show higher levels of demand on the North of Spain (Zamora and Santiago), but the cities on the South produce higher levels of CO2 emissions as they are mainly driven by cooling demands, directly related in this analysis to the electrical consumption of the hostels. Final results were used to understand, at different scales and from different points of view, how each one of the proposed strategies performs for each one of the selected climate zones.

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HORTUS CONCLUSUS. In collaboration with Pablo Fernández Lorenzo, Pablo Redondo Díez, Alfonso González Gaisán and Francisco Blanco Velasco

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Spain’s immigrant population has increased 380 % in the last decade, accounting for 13.1 % of the total population. This fact has led her to become during 2009 the eighth recipient country of international immigrants in the world. The aim of this article is to describe the evolution of mortality and the main causes of death among the Spanish-born and foreign-born populations residing in Spain between 1999 and 2008. Age-standardised mortality rates (ASRs), average age and comparative mortality ratios among foreign-born and Spanish-born populations residing in Spain were computed for every year and sub-period by sex, cause of death and place of birth as well as by the ASR percentage change. During 1999–2008 the ASR showed a progressive decrease in the risk of death in the Spanish-born population (−17.8 % for men and −16.6 % for women) as well as in the foreign-born one (−45.9 % for men and −35.7 % for women). ASR also showed a progressive decrease for practically all the causes of death, in both populations. It has been observed that the risk of death due to neoplasms and respiratory diseases among immigrants is lower than that of their Spanish-born counterparts, but risk due to external causes is higher. Places of birth with the greater decreases are Northern Europe, Eastern Europe, Western Europe, Southern Europe, and Latin America and the Caribbean. The research shows the differences in the reduction of death risk between Spanish-born and immigrant inhabitants between 1999 and 2008. These results could contribute to the ability of central and local governments to create effective health policy. Further research is necessary to examine changes in mortality trends among immigrant populations as a consequence of the economic crisis and the reforms in the Spanish health system. Spanish data sources should incorporate into their records information that enables them to find out the immigrant duration of permanence and the possible impact of this on mortality indicators.

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The lava park is surrounded by the volcanic mountains of Les Preses, revealed as the edges of a vast caldera and repeated at a human scale with low walls made up of small volcanic boulders. These walls are evidence of how successive communities have gradually worked amongst this lava flow to create arable land, supported by rich soils. The people saw the land prosper and learned how to maximise its productivity. Boulders that had come to the surface during agricultural cultivation were moved with human labour to create "artigas“, the characteristic pilings of volcanic stone. They have been used to raise and lower areas, to create shelter and exposure for their crops and to make caves for storage. Amongst all this, paths weave and cross. The whole place is made up of grey and black rocks with a constant cover of green crops or grass.

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Between the 22nd and the 26th of March 2006, Barcelona hosted the 4th Biennal Europea de Paisatge (European Biennial of Landscape Architecture). It comprised a day of presentations for the Rosa Barba Prize for European Landscape Architecture, a day long symposium, and a half day discussion on IBA park projects. Approximately 300 people attended, including sizable groups from Barcelona, France, The Netherlands, Denmark, and Germany. Only three participants from English speaking countries were present, despite simultaneous translation into English throughout.

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The creative work, ¡Latin Jazz! is a 50 minute radio documentary to be broadcast on ABC Classic FM. It looks at the evolution of Latin jazz from Spain, Cuba and the United States. It examines the social effects on the style and specifically on the syncretic movement between the countries. The documentary traces my travel to Madrid, Spain and looks at Latin jazz through a deconstruction of the style, musical examples and interviews with prominent artists. Artists interviewed were Chano Domínguez, a Spanish flamenco jazz pianist, Bobby Martínez an American saxophonist, Alain Pérez a Cuban bassist and Pepe Rivero a Cuban pianist. The exegesis supports the radio documentary by examining the style in more depth, and is broken into three main sections. First it traces the historical relationship that occurred through the Ida y Vuelta (To and Fro), the similarities and influences through the habanera, the decíma and the religion of Santería. This is followed by specific musical elements within Latin jazz such as instrumentation, clave, harmony and improvisation, whilst the third section looks at the influences of the new syncretic movement back to Spain.

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This paper studies the evolution of tax morale in Spain in the post-France era. In contrast to the previous tax compliance literature, the current paper investigates tax morale as the dependent variable and attempts to answer what actually shapes tax morale. Te analysis uses suevey data from two sources; the World Values Survey and the European Values Survey, allowing us to observe tax morale in Spain for the years 1981,1990, 1995 and 1999/2000. The sutudy of evolution of tax morale in Spain over nearly a 20-year span is particularly interesting because the political and fiscal system evolved very rapidly during this period.

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A crustal-scale shear zone network at the fossil brittle-to-viscous transition exposed at Cap de Creus, NE Spain evolved by coeval fracturing and viscous, mylonitic overprinting of an existing foliation. Initial fracturing led to mylonitic shearing as rock softened in ductilely deformed zones surrounding the fractures. Mylonitic shear zones widened by lateral branching of fractures from these shear zones and by synthetic rotation of the existing foliation between the fractures and shear zones. Shear zones lengthened by a combination of fracturing and mylonitic shearing in front of the shear zone tips. Shear zones interconnected along and across their shearing planes, separating rhomb-shaped lozenges of less deformed rock. Lozenges were subsequently incorporated into the mylonitic shear zones by widening in the manner described above. In this way, deformation became homogeneous on the scale of initial fracturing (metre- to decametre-scale). In contrast, the shear zone network represents localisation of strain on a decametre-length scale. The strength of the continental crust at the time of coeval fracturing and viscous shearing is inferred to have decreased with time and strain, as fracturing evolved to mylonitic shearing, and as the shear zones coalesced to form a through-going network subparallel to the shearing plane. Crustal strength must therefore be considered as strain- and scale-dependent.

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Migration within the European Union (EU) has increased since the Union was established. Community pharmacies provide open access to health care services and can be the first, most frequently used or even the only contact with a nation s health care system among mobile community residents. In some of the mass-migration areas in Southern Europe, most of the customers may represent mobile citizens of foreign background. This has not always been taken into consideration in the development of community pharmacy services. Mobile patients have been on the EU's health policy agenda, but they have seldom been mentioned in the context of community pharmacies. In most of the EU member states, governments control the specific legislation concerning community pharmacies and there is no harmonised pharmaceutical policy or consistent minimal standards for community pharmacy services in the EU. The aim of this study was to understand medication use, the role of community pharmacies and the symptom mitigation process of mobile community residents. Finns living in Spain were used as an example to examine how community pharmacies in a EU member state meet the needs of mobile community residents. The data were collected by a survey in 2002 (response rate 53%, n= 533) and by five focus group discussions in 2006 (n=30). A large number (70%) of the respondents had moved to Spain for health reasons and suffered from chronic morbidity. Community pharmacies had an important role in the healthcare of mobile community residents and the respondents were mostly satisfied with these services. However, several medication safety risks related to community pharmacy practices were identified: 1) Availability of prescription medicines without prescription (e.g., antibiotics, sleeping pills, Viagra®, asthma medications, cardiovascular medicines, psoriasis medicines and analgesics); 2) Irrational use of medicines (e.g., 41% of antibiotic users had bought their antibiotics without a prescription, and the most common reasons for antibiotic self-medication were symptomatic common colds and sore throats); 3) Language barriers between patients and pharmacy professionals; 4) Lack of medication counselling; 5) Unqualified pharmacy personnel providing pharmacotherapy. A fifth of the respondents reported experiencing problems during pharmacy visits in Spain, and the lack of a common language was the source of most of these problems. The findings of this study indicate that regulations and their enforcement can play a crucial role in actually assuring the rational and safe use of medicines. These results can be used in the development of pharmaceutical and healthcare policies in the EU. It is important to define consistent minimum standards for community pharmacy services in the EU. Then, the increasing number of mobile community residents could access safe and high quality health care services, including community pharmacy services, in every member state within the EU.