32 resultados para Masterplan
Resumo:
The Centre for Subtropical Design has prepared this submission to assist the Gold Coast City Council to finalise a plan and detailed design guidelines for the Urban Plaza Zone of Surfers Paradise Foreshore Redevelopment Masterplan which will create a public open space ‘alive’ with the quality appropriate to a place which is both a local centre and an international destination. This review has been informed by the two over-arching values identified as characteristics of a subtropical place and people’s connection to it: A sense of openness and permeability, and Engagement with the natural environment. The existing qualities of the foreshore area proposed as the Urban Plaza Zone, reflect these subtropical place values, and are integral to the Surfers Paradise identity: Seamless visual and spatial access to the beach and sea, Permeable interface between beach and built zones provided by beach planting and shade to sand by Pandanus, A shade zone mediating beach and linear promenade, road and commercial zones, enabling a variety of social and visual experiences, on soft and hard finishes, and A lively, constantly moving shared road and pedestrian way catering for events and day to day activities with visual access to beach and shaded areas. The Centre for Subtropical Design commends the Gold Coast City Council on preparing a plan for a public open space that is a contemporary departure from the adhoc basis of development that has occurred, in that it will make this area more accessible. However, the proposed plan seems to be working too hard in terms of ‘program’. While providing an identifiable interruption in the linear extent of the Foreshore, the lack of continuity of design in terms of both hardscaping (such as perpendicular paving elements) and softscaping (such as tree selections) may contribute to a lack of definition for the entire Foreshore as a place that mediates, along its length, between sea and land. Providing a hard edge to a beach character of soft and planted transitional elements needs to balance the proposed visual and physical barrier with the need for perceived and actual easy access. The Surfers Paradise identity needs strengthening through attention to planting for shade, materials, particularly selection of paving colours, and stronger delineation of the linear nature of the Foreshore. The Urban Plaza zone is an appropriate interruption to the continuous planting, however the link from the commercial zone overtakes the public and beach zone. A more seamless transition from shop to sea, better integration of the roadway and pedestrian zone and improved physical transition from concrete to sand is recommended. Built form solutions must be robust and designed with the subtropical design principles and the Surfers Paradise identity as underpinning parameters for a lasting and memorable public open space.
Resumo:
El proyecto se desarrolla en tres escalas. Por un lado están las propuestas a nivel ciudad muy relacionadas con la siguiente escala, la de la universidad, y por último hay una escala de detalle, tanto para ciudad como para universidad. Se plantea la creación de unos nodos interconectados por los corredores verdes de la ciudad que den servicios básicos a la ciudad tales gestión de residuos, equipamientos públicos, puntos de agua, saneamiento...)
Resumo:
This project involved the complete refurbishment and extension of a 1980’s two-storey domestic brick building, previously used as a Boarding House (Class 3), into Middle School facilities (Class 9b) on a heritage listed site at Nudgee College secondary school, Brisbane. The building now accommodates 12 technologically advanced classrooms, computer lab and learning support rooms, tuckshop, art room, mini library/reading/stage area, dedicated work areas for science and large projects with access to water on both floors, staff facilities and an undercover play area suitable for assemblies and presentations. The project was based on a Reggio Emilia approach, in which the organisation of the physical environment is referred to as the child’s third teacher, creating opportunities for complex, varied, sustained and changing relationships between people and ideas. Classrooms open to a communal centre piazza and are integrated with the rest of the school and the school with the surrounding community. In order to achieve this linkage of the building with the overall masterplan of the site, a key strategy of the internal planning was to orientate teaching areas around a well defined active circulation space that breaks out of the building form to legibly define the new access points to the building and connect up to the pathway network of the campus. The width of the building allowed for classrooms and a generous corridor that has become ‘breakout’ teaching areas for art, IT, and small group activities. Large sliding glass walls allow teachers to maintain supervision of students across all areas and allow maximum light penetration through small domestic window openings into the deep and low-height spaces. The building was also designed with an effort to uphold cultural characteristics from the Edmund Rice Education Charter (2004). Coherent planning is accompanied by a quality fit-out, creating a vibrant and memorable environment in which to deliver the upper primary curriculum. Consistent with the Reggio Emilia approach, materials, expressive of the school’s colours, are used in a contemporary, adventurous manner to create panels of colour useful for massing and defining the ‘breakout’ teaching areas and paths of travel, and storage elements are detailed and arranged to draw attention to their aesthetic features. Modifications were difficult due to the random placement of load bearing walls, minimum ceiling heights, the general standard of finishes and new fire and energy requirements, however the reuse of this building was assessed to be up to 30% cheaper than an equivalent new building, The fit out integrates information technology and services at a level not usually found in primary school facilities. This has been achieved within the existing building fabric through thoughtful detailing and co-ordination with allied disciplines.
Resumo:
Recent advances in the planning and delivery of radiotherapy treatments have resulted in improvements in the accuracy and precision with which therapeutic radiation can be administered. As the complexity of the treatments increases it becomes more difficult to predict the dose distribution in the patient accurately. Monte Carlo methods have the potential to improve the accuracy of the dose calculations and are increasingly being recognised as the “gold standard” for predicting dose deposition in the patient. In this study, software has been developed that enables the transfer of treatment plan information from the treatment planning system to a Monte Carlo dose calculation engine. A database of commissioned linear accelerator models (Elekta Precise and Varian 2100CD at various energies) has been developed using the EGSnrc/BEAMnrc Monte Carlo suite. Planned beam descriptions and CT images can be exported from the treatment planning system using the DICOM framework. The information in these files is combined with an appropriate linear accelerator model to allow the accurate calculation of the radiation field incident on a modelled patient geometry. The Monte Carlo dose calculation results are combined according to the monitor units specified in the exported plan. The result is a 3D dose distribution that could be used to verify treatment planning system calculations. The software, MCDTK (Monte Carlo Dicom ToolKit), has been developed in the Java programming language and produces BEAMnrc and DOSXYZnrc input files, ready for submission on a high-performance computing cluster. The code has been tested with the Eclipse (Varian Medical Systems), Oncentra MasterPlan (Nucletron B.V.) and Pinnacle3 (Philips Medical Systems) planning systems. In this study the software was validated against measurements in homogenous and heterogeneous phantoms. Monte Carlo models are commissioned through comparison with quality assurance measurements made using a large square field incident on a homogenous volume of water. This study aims to provide a valuable confirmation that Monte Carlo calculations match experimental measurements for complex fields and heterogeneous media.
Resumo:
Site analysis and landscape design developed for the Little Boat Harbour marine ecosystem and recreation area. Analysis conducted and design created by Dr Ian Weir QUT in collaboration with Mr Nathan McQuoid Landscape Ecologist and Mr Craig Lebens Bremer Bay Dive operater and marine ecologist (amateur). Includes A3 masterplan produced by Kylie Feher graduate architect in association with Dr Weir. Document presented to the 18 Dec 2013 Council meeting of the Shire of Jerramungup and subsequently adopted by that local government with implementation subject to funding.
Resumo:
The report provides an account of the activities of the Lake Kariba Fisheries Research Institute of Zimbabwe during the period July 1997 to December 1998. It is presented under the following major headings: 1) Introduction; 2) Institute finances; 3) Staffing and staff training; 4) Infrastructure; 5) Vehicles and vessels; 6) Fisheries management -- kapenta management, inshore fisheries management, law enforcement; 7) Kariba Lakeshore Combination Masterplan; 8) Joint protocol; 9) Research work; and, 10) Publications and presentations.
Resumo:
Zaha Hadid's Kartal Pendik Masterplan (2006) for a new city centre on the east bank of Istanbul proposes the redevelopment of an abandoned industrial site located in a crucial infrastructural node between Europe and Asia as a connecting system between the neighbouring areas of Kartal in the west and Pendik in the east. The project is organised on what its architects call a soft grid, a flexible and adaptable grid that allows it to articulate connections and differences of form, density and use within the same spatial structure [1]. Its final overall design constitutes only one of the many possible configurations that the project may take in response to the demands of the different areas included in the masterplan, and is produced from a script that is able to generate both built volumes and open spaces, skyscrapers as well as parks. The soft grid in fact produces a ‘becoming’ rather than a finite and definitive form: its surface space does not look like a grid, but is derived from a grid operation which is best explained by the project presentation in video animation. The grid here is a process of ‘gridding’, enacted according to ancient choreographed linear movements of measuring, defining, adjusting, reconnecting spaces through an articulated surface rather than superimposed on an ignored given like an indifferent colonising carpet.
Resumo:
The Biospheric Project is a nested multi-scalar urban agriculture project that aims to develop sustainable food systems in disadvantaged communities, though not only physical interventions, such as the urban masterplan and neighbourhood design to the building and its roof and façade, but also through social and commercial interventions, such as community involvement, businesses and a distribution system.
The project is focused around the Biospheric Foundation, a community interest company and research think-tank whose aim is to hasten our transition to a closed cycle, low-carbon economy. Its home is Irwell house, that houses a large-scale aquaponic-based food production system, which is directly linked to a whole-food shop (78 Steps, named after the distance from the productive system) and a whole food distribution system (the Whole Box). The building sits within a post-industrial landscape which is being developed into a new productive landscape, utilizing the the technologies developed by the Biospheric Foundation and Prof Greg Keeffe of Queens University Belfast. The collaboration links designer, academics and activists across the disciplines of Urban design, Architecture, Permaculture, landscape design, environmental science and business and community.
Resumo:
This research project focuses on contemporary eagle-taming falconry practice of the Altaic Kazakhs animal herding society in Bayan Ulgii Province in Western Mongolia. It aims to contributing both theoretical and empirical criteria for cultural preservation of Asian falconry. This cultural as well as environmental discourse is illustrated with concentrated field research framed by ecological anthropology and ethno-ornithology from the viewpoint of “Human-Animal Interaction (HAI)” and “Human-Animal Behavior (HAB)”. Part I (Chapter 2 & 3) explores ethno-archaeological and ethno-ornithological dimensions by interpretive research of archaeological artefacts which trace the historical depth of Asian falconry culture. Part II (Chapter 4 & 5) provides an extensive ethnographic narrative of Altaic Kazakh falconry, which is the central part of this research project. The “Traditional Art and Knowledge (TAK)” in human-raptor interactions, comprising the entire cycle of capture, perch, feeding, training, hunting, and release, is presented with specific emphasis on its relation to environmental and societal context. Traditional falconry as integral part of a nomadic lifestyle has to face some critical problems nowadays which necessitate preventing the complete disappearance of this outstanding indigenous cultural heritage. Part III (Chapter 6 & 7) thus focuses on the cultural sustainability of Altaic Kazakh falconry. Changing livelihoods, sedentarisation, and decontextualisation are identified as major threats. The role of Golden Eagle Festivals is critically analysed with regard to positive and negative impact. This part also intends to contribute to the academic definition of eagle falconry as an intangible cultural heritage, and to provide scientific criteria for a preservation master plan, as well as stipulate local resilience by pointing to successive actions needed for conservation. This research project concludes that cultural sustainability of Altaic Kazakh falconry needs to be supported from the angles of three theoretical frameworks; (1) Cultural affairs for protection based on the concept of nature-guardianship in its cultural domain, (2) Sustainable development and improvement of animal herding productivity and herder’s livelihood, (3) Natural resource management, especially supporting the population of Golden Eagles, their potential prey animals, and their nesting environment.
Resumo:
La ricerca indaga la praticabilità di uno sviluppo urbano a crescita zero quale risposta al consumo di territorio ed allo sprawl urbano. Con ciò si intende il soddisfacimento del fabbisogno abitativo di un determinato arco temporale all'interno del tessuto urbano consolidato, operando tramite la densificazione della città, costruendo all'interno dei vuoti urbani e degli spazi di risulta, ed evitando di consumare ulteriore terreno agricolo. Lo studio viene declinato prendendo ad oggetto dell'analisi la città di Faenza e come orizzonte temporale il 2032. Il tema prevalente della ricerca riguarda la destinazione residenziale che, in base al principio della mixitè, viene portata anche nelle aree produttive e artigianali nel tentativo di contrastare la monofunzionalità dei settori urbani. Calcolate le quantità edilizie necessarie a soddisfare le esigenze abitative previste, sono stati ipotizzati numerosi interventi all'interno di alcuni tra i vuoti precedentemente catalogati; i progetti sono compresi all'interno di comparti per cui sono definite le diverse destinazioni d'uso in percentuali differenti a seconda della situazione urbana in cui sono inseriti. Di tutti gli interventi proposti, ne sono stati estratti due, localizzati in aree analoghe per vocazione e caratteristiche. Su questi si è effettuato un approfondimento progettuale alla scala architettonica quale verifica delle possibilità offerte dall'approccio urbanistico che ha guidato il masterplan.
Resumo:
Questo lavoro si pone in continuità rispetto al Laboratorio di Sintesi “La città e le case”, nel corso del quale si sono condotti un’analisi del territorio di Ravenna, in particolar modo della Darsena di Città, e uno studio dei possibili scenari di rigenerazione urbana dell’area industriale dismessa del canale Candiano. L’area della Darsena è stata “dimenticata” dagli strumenti di pianificazione per molto tempo, soltanto a partire dagli anni ’90 l’Amministrazione Comunale si è interessata al suo recupero, senza però particolare successo. L’intento di questo lavoro è quello di ripensare l’intero comparto della Darsena di Città attraverso un progetto di rigenerazione urbana che miri a collegare quest’area con la città storica e a ricreare il rapporto tra questa e l’acqua attraverso più fasi distribuite nell’arco dei prossimi 30 anni. Il progetto si pone in continuità con la città esistente ma allo stesso tempo punta a migliorarne alcuni aspetti critici: la mancanza dell’affaccio della città sull’acqua, la cesura nel tessuto urbano dovuta alla presenza dell’infrastruttura ferroviaria e della darsena. Le modalità di sviluppo del progetto per Ravenna riprendono l’esperienza tedesca di HafenCity ad Amburgo dove, dopo un masterplan generale per tutta l’area portuale da recuperare, si è proceduto con concorsi per ciascun edificio così da ottenere una grande varietà architettonica. Maggiore attenzione viene data al progetto degli spazi pubblici poiché la fruizione di essi da parte della collettività e l’attaccamento a questi luoghi possono essere gli elementi trainanti per la riqualificazione dell’intera area. Il progetto degli spazi pubblici è pensato come un sistema unitario poiché deve essere l’elemento che guida, “coordina” e uniforma il progetto del costruito.
Resumo:
La presente tesi si pone in continuità con il Laboratorio di Sintesi Finale in Urbanistica “La città e le case. L’urbanistica e lo spazio dell’abitare”e si propone di applicare e sperimentare una nuova forma urbana quella dell’open block derivante dall’omonima teoria dell’architetto francese Christian de Portzamparc. L’intervento si inserisce all’interno della cosiddetta Darsena di Città di Ravenna, un’ex area industriale di 136 ettari collocata a ridosso del centro storico della città, ma priva di collegamenti diretti con questo da cui si discosta nettamente per caratteristiche e funzioni. Nel corso del laboratorio si sono condotte analisi in maniera approfondita rispetto alle caratteristiche dello stato di fatto e dei bisogni principali del territorio, non solo facendo riferimento agli stessi strumenti urbanistici, ma anche avvalendosi dell’incontro con professionisti, tecnici e docenti. La conoscenza dell’area così raggiunta ci ha permesso di redigere, a conclusione del laboratorio, una serie di linee guida generali da cui nasce il masterplan. Su questo si basa la riqualificazione urbana dell’intera area da cui deriva la peculiarità della nuova Darsena ovvero la coesistenza di due rive dalle caratteristiche opposte e allo stesso tempo complementari. A nord trova spazio la “riva naturale” contraddistinta dalla prevalenza di spazi verdi di diversa natura; questa riva si pone in stretta relazione con il verde agricolo collocato nelle immediate vicinanze della Darsena e fortemente segnato dalla centuriazione romana. La riva sud, la “riva urbana”, è invece caratterizzata dalla prevalenza del costruito che trova un diretto confronto con il tessuto urbano preesistente collocato sia all’interno dell’area sia lungo il limite sud della stessa. Grande importanza per la riqualificazione del Comparto Darsena è stata data al mantenimento degli edifici di archeologia industriale ai quali viene dato ruolo centrale attraverso le nuove funzioni che vengono loro affidate. Altro aspetto fondamentale per la riuscita della riqualificazione della Darsena e allo stesso tempo valoreaggiunto per l’intero territorio comunale, nonché argomento centrale della presente tesi, è il tema dell’housing sociale. A seguito di analisi, studi sulle politiche abitative attualmente vigenti a livello regionale e comunale e indagini sui bisogni radicati nel territorio, si è redatto un masterplan da cui nasce un progetto per un quartiere con housing sociale situato all’interno del comparto CMC. Il progetto nasce dalle riflessioni condotte sull’argomento, mette al centro l’idea della mixité e si fonda sulla forma urbana dell’isolato aperto.
Resumo:
A partire dallo studio del masterplan di progetto urbano dello studio Mbm di Bohigas, per la riqualificazione del quadrante Nord-Ovest della città di Parma, viene formulata una proposta alternativa con l'approfondimento di un lotto adiacente al Torrente Parma. Si sviluppa il progetto di un edificio polifunzionale a contatto con il parco urbano e con il parco fluviale, di una piazza e di una passerella ciclopedonale che congiunge le sponde del torrente Parma. la progettazione segue i temi della sostenibilità e del risparmio energetico con l'impiego di sistemi solari, facciata ventilata, sistemi geoterici e fitodepurazione. Si approfondiscono temi quali i sistemi di controllo dell' edificio e la domotica, volti al risparmio energetico, di gestione e alla sicurezza. Le conclusioni volgono lo sguardo alla situazione del mercato nazionale e europeo in termini di valutazione del valore dell'immobile e della sua commerciabilità.