Academic literature on the topic 'Khayalisha social housing project'

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Journal articles on the topic "Khayalisha social housing project"

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McKellar, Erin. "The social project: Housing Postwar France." Planning Perspectives 31, no. 4 (July 13, 2016): 661–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02665433.2016.1203108.

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Guo, Xian Fang. "Analysis of Social Value of Affordable Housing Project." Advanced Materials Research 524-527 (May 2012): 2712–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amr.524-527.2712.

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The affordable housing is not allocated by the market and therefore the value of it can not be promoted by any effective market competition. Because of a lack of value evaluation in implementing the affordable housing project, the mechanism of value evaluation should be introduced into the process of making and implementing policies for the affordable housing project. To satisfy the public demand, the affordable housing embodies government’s social responsibility and thus the preliminary function is to realize its social value. A priority should be steadfastly given to the evaluation of its social value. By means of social value evaluation, we can make full use of its value-oriented function and hopefully maximize the social value of the affordable housing project.
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Cobb, P. Denise, Jon Shefner, and Beth A. Rubin. "Sponsored Social Change in a Public Housing Project." Qualitative Sociology 29, no. 2 (June 2006): 211–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11133-006-9019-8.

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Granath Hansson, Anna. "Social innovation in housing development:." Nordic Journal of Surveying and Real Estate Research 15, no. 1 (September 28, 2020): 7–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.30672/njsr.88990.

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Homelessness has increased substantially in Sweden in the last decade with an emphasis on structural homelessness. Further, municipalities have the responsibility to house a certain number of newly-arrived immigrants under the Settlement Act. Many municipalities have had difficulties in meeting the acute housing need, as well as its costs, and have started to look at new types of housing solutions. Socially innovative initiatives of the civil society and private developers have been encouraged. This paper investigates three civil society and private housing developments and how they might contribute to socially and economically sustainable housing solutions for households in or on the verge to homelessness. In order to operationalize the sustainability concept related to these local projects, an analytical set of questions have been developed based on the literature and project data. It is concluded that all three projects are socially and economically sustainable at the outset, but that certain traits of the project set-ups make them more uncertain in the longer run. The sustainability lens was fruitful in analyzing the projects, but non-physical factors will in many cases be person dependent and therefore difficult to generalize. As it is expected that this new type of housing in the Swedish setting will increase in numbers, the analytical set of questions should be tested in relation to further projects and be developed further.
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Parks, Richard C. "The Social Project: Housing Postwar France by Kenny Cupers." Technology and Culture 58, no. 2 (2017): 593–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tech.2017.0058.

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Baldiri Salcedo Rahola, Tadeo, and Ad Straub. "Project delivery methods in European social housing energy renovations." Property Management 31, no. 3 (June 21, 2013): 216–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/02637471311321469.

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Schilling, Derek. "The Social Project: Housing Postwar France by Kenny Cupers." French Review 89, no. 1 (2015): 282–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/tfr.2015.0217.

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Casey, Rionach, and Chris Allen. "Social Housing Managers and the Performance Ethos." Work, Employment and Society 18, no. 2 (June 2004): 395–412. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/09500172004042775.

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In sociology, ‘the professional project’ is understood as a collective endeavour of occupational groups that only succeeds if those groups possess, and control access to, a unique stock of knowledge. Urban sociologists have been critical of public housing managers’ collective endeavours to present themselves as a profession because they use generic knowledge and common sense in their work. They also argue that ‘the professional project’ of housing management is being further under-mined by the ‘performance ethos’, since this now allows service managers to exert even more control over what public housing managers do and thus de-skills them even more. Our argument is that this analysis of the impact of the performance ethos is based on a conceptually limiting view of power as a repressive force that enforces ‘blanket restrictions’ on group activity, i.e. what professional groups are free to do. Conversely, we adopt a Foucauldian view of power because it better explains our research findings. Foucault suggests that power does not simply repress group activity. Power is also appropriated by individuals who use it to redefine themselves, e.g. who and what they are. We draw on our empirical data to show how individual housing managers were appropriating the performance culture in productive ways to achieve their own individual ends (i.e. to ‘work on’ their professional selves so as to re-define themselves and thus their individual claim to professional status). We use this analysis to argue that an individualized (as opposed to collective) ‘professional project of the self’ is emerging in housing management that has not yet been adequately captured in the sociological literature.
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Pezolet, Nicola. "Review: The Social Project: Housing Postwar France, by Kenny Cupers." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 76, no. 1 (March 1, 2017): 115–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jsah.2017.76.1.115.

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Jiang, Xuemei, and Yinhua Mai. "The social welfare housing project and its effects in China." Journal of Systems Science and Complexity 28, no. 2 (June 10, 2014): 393–408. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11424-014-3261-z.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Khayalisha social housing project"

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Lins, Deborah Martins de Oliveira. "Integrated Project Delivery: Guidelines for Project Companies working in Social Housing." Universidade Federal do CearÃ, 2013. http://www.teses.ufc.br/tde_busca/arquivo.php?codArquivo=11224.

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CoordenaÃÃo de AperfeiÃoamento de Pessoal de NÃvel Superior
The âMinha Casa Minha Vidaâ (MCMV), which aims to reduce the housing deficit, launched its second phase, with a bold goal to hire two million housing units by the year 2014. While this economic environment encouraged companies in the Construction Industry, they were not adequately prepared to absorb the new demands. To reach them, we need to implement innovations in traditional processes of design and construction of this type of housing, increasing productivity, but without loss of quality of the products generated. The projects related to housing construction have become increasingly complex, and has increased the number of projects needed to better execution of the work, causing serious problems of compatibility and rework. In view of the peculiar characteristics of the enterprises of Social Housing (HIS), the profit margins offered by these are greatly reduced, forcing companies to pursue lower production costs and execution time of compression, in order to minimize the incidence of fixed costs. It is worth noting that the initial stages of development, such as program and project are those that present the greatest opportunities for intervention and value. In some countries, especially the United States, these problems have been minimized through approaches such as Integrated Project Delivery (IPD) and the use of design tools such as the Building Information Modeling (BIM). In turn, the vast majority of projects in Brazil, especially the HIS, are not designed with this in mind integration. Within this context, the aim of this work is to propose guidelines for increasing the level of integrated management for design firms that operate in MCMV (range 0-3 minimum wages), based on the principles of IPD. This is a qualitative study with an exploratory-descriptive and research strategy used was the multiple case study, divided into four phases: literature review, exploratory stage, stage of conducting case studies and step analyzes and propositions . Therefore, we carried out a survey to contextualize the partial results of the program and analyze the role of each of the major players involved. There was a peculiarity in the state of CearÃ: the Sinduscon-Ce provides companies affiliated three types of architectural design, installations and structures (reference projects). We investigated how was the design process of these types and the level of integration between professionals. The main tool for data collection were semi-structured interviews with the designers, with the representative of Box and Sinduscon. Based on these data, we carried out a cross-sectional analysis of business and design, as well as a diagnosis of these assumptions with respect to the IPD. We also propose an adaptation of the principles of IPD directed to designers Finally, the main contribution of this work is to propose guidelines for increasing the level of integrated management between designers working in MCMV, relating them to the principles of IPD .
O Programa Minha Casa Minha Vida (MCMV), que tem por finalidade reduzir o dÃficit habitacional brasileiro, lanÃou sua segunda fase, com uma meta ousada de contratar dois milhÃes de unidades habitacionais atà o ano de 2014. Ao mesmo tempo em que este cenÃrio econÃmico incentivava as empresas da IndÃstria da ConstruÃÃo Civil, estas nÃo estavam adequadamente preparadas para absorver as novas demandas. Para alcanÃÃ-las, à preciso implementar inovaÃÃes nos processos tradicionais de projeto e construÃÃo deste tipo de moradia, aumentando a produtividade, porÃm sem prejuÃzo de qualidade dos produtos gerados. Os projetos ligados à construÃÃo habitacional tÃm se tornado cada vez mais complexos, bem como tem aumentado a quantidade de projetos necessÃrios a uma melhor execuÃÃo da obra, provocando sÃrios problemas de compatibilizaÃÃo e retrabalho. Em face das caracterÃsticas peculiares dos empreendimentos de HabitaÃÃo de Interesse Social (HIS), as margens de lucro proporcionadas por estes sÃo bastante reduzidas, forÃando as empresas a perseguirem menores custos de produÃÃo e a compressÃo dos prazos de execuÃÃo, como forma de minimizar a incidÃncia de custos fixos. Cabe ressaltar ainda que as etapas iniciais do empreendimento, tais como o programa e o projeto, sÃo as que apresentam as maiores oportunidades de intervenÃÃo e agregaÃÃo de valor. Em alguns paÃses, principalmente nos Estados Unidos, estes problemas tÃm sido minimizados atravÃs de abordagens como o Integrated Project Delivery (IPD) e do uso de ferramentas de projeto tais como o Building Information Modeling (BIM). Por sua vez, a grande maioria dos empreendimentos brasileiros, especialmente os de HIS, nÃo sÃo desenvolvidos dentro deste espÃrito de integraÃÃo. Dentro deste contexto, o objetivo deste trabalho à propor diretrizes para aumentar o nÃvel de gestÃo integrada em empresas de projeto que atuam no programa MCMV (faixa de 0-3 salÃrios mÃnimos), com base nos princÃpios do IPD. Trata-se de um estudo qualitativo, com carÃter exploratÃrio-descritivo, e a estratÃgia de pesquisa utilizada foi o estudo de caso mÃltiplo, dividida em quatro fases: pesquisa bibliogrÃfica, etapa exploratÃria, etapa de conduÃÃo dos estudos de caso e etapa de anÃlises e proposiÃÃes. Para tanto, realizou-se um levantamento para contextualizar os resultados parciais do referido programa e analisar o papel de cada um dos principais agentes envolvidos. Verificou-se uma particularidade no estado do CearÃ: o Sinduscon-Ce disponibiliza Ãs empresas filiadas trÃs tipologias de projeto de arquitetura, instalaÃÃes e estruturas (projetos de referÃncia). Investigou-se como se deu o processo de projeto destas tipologias e qual o nÃvel de integraÃÃo entre os profissionais. A principal ferramenta para a coleta de dados foram as entrevistas semiestruturadas com os projetistas, com representante da Caixa e do Sinduscon. Com base nesses dados, realizou-se uma anÃlise cruzada das empresas e projeto, assim como um diagnÃstico destas com relaÃÃo aos postulados do IPD. PropÃe-se ainda uma adaptaÃÃo dos princÃpios do IPD direcionada para os projetistas Por fim, a principal contribuiÃÃo deste trabalho à a proposiÃÃo de diretrizes para aumentar o nÃvel de gestÃo integrada entre os projetistas que atuam no programa MCMV, relacionando-as aos princÃpios do IPD.
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Jönsson, Amanda. "Sharing cross social boundaries : A housing project for social variance." Thesis, Umeå universitet, Arkitekthögskolan vid Umeå universitet, 2019. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:umu:diva-159782.

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When the harbour settlement of Holmsund emerged the paternalistic milling society solely built itself around one cause, this generated a closed community consisting of a very uniform population. The impact is still present to the current day, homogenisation is causing individualisation and power is expressed by means of tangible possessions. Holmsunds’ door is closed, this BA proposal wish to unlock the door and leave it open. In order to accomplish the previously stated the strategic site of intervention is where one is the most responsive, where the daily life happens, where one lives. Modernity and digitalization generates a society where services are moving from physical spaces in the public to rather taking place within the home, thus putting a greater emphasis on the way we live. Not to mention the amount of time and value we invest in living during our lives, constantly craving to settle, to connect our bodies to one physical space. On that account housing will acts as the architectural engine for societal change and serves as the base for this project. This BA project proposes a housing project where the concept of sharing acts as the key theme. The idea suggests an apartment building which emphasizes the connection with its surroundings by combining public and private functions in a balanced transition and thus generating connections between various people. In more specific terms the building is defined through the means of sharing in various scales by: mixing different users, sharing activities in communal spaces and sharing resources through a reusing facility.
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March, Tanya Lyn. "Guild's Lake Courts : an impermanent housing project." PDXScholar, 2010. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/2812.

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Guild's Lake Courts was built as temporary worker housing for the steel and shipyard industries during World War II. The massive housing development in Northwest Portland consisted of 2,432 units of housing, five community buildings, five childcare centers, a grade school and a fire station. Guild's Lake Courts was the eighth largest housing project built at that time in the United States. The peak population in January 1945 was approximately 10,000 individuals. Archival research, face-to-face oral histories, and resident reunions were used to explore the social, architectural and political history of Guild's Lake Courts. The lens for understanding how the community operated is dominantly for the social history that of a childhood homefront experience. Four wartime themes emerged in this study: 1) that Portland's focus on prejudice dimmed during the war years, 2) that the community was a confluence of humanity, 3) that the design of the site and the housing was shaped by a convergence of New Deal innovations in design construction technologies and electrification and 4) that there was a willingness to sacrifice creature comforts during the war years. Guild's Lake Courts as a residential community under went three rapid evolutions prior to its demolition in 1951, a wartime housing operation 1942-1945, affordable housing 1945-1948, and a haven for Vanport Refugees June 1948-1950. Guild's Lake Courts history has been overlooked but it offers insights into the possible fate of the residents of Vanport City had the community not been flooded in 1948. The story of Guild's Lake Courts is a counterpoint story to Vanport City the largest of the three defense housing projects in Oregon that admitted African-Americans during the war years.
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Andersson, Tobias. "Home sweet home? : Free housing project and integration in Bogotá, Colombia." Thesis, Linnéuniversitetet, Institutionen för samhällsstudier (SS), 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:lnu:diva-100724.

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Every year millions of human beings are forcibly displaced from their homes due to armed conflicts and natural disasters. By the end of 2019, more people than ever before were identified as Internally Displaced People (IDP), with numbers exceeding 45 million worldwide. There have been various initiatives to repair the displaced by several government, such as giving them interest-free loans, temporary shelter, subsidies and free building material. In Colombia, the government initiated a ground-breaking program that supplied more than 100.000 families with free housings. The free housing program was intended to fight inequality by alleviating the housing deficit, repair the IDPs for their losses caused by conflict, and further improve their quality of life. Semi-structured interviews were conducted in the free housing community Rincón de Bolonia, which since 2016 has hosted more than 400 IDP families from various parts of the country. The objective was to compare the free housing programs objectives with the beneficiaries' experience, furthermore, if they think that the project serves the purpose of victim reparation. Intergroup Contact Theory was further adopted to analyse how the coexistence dynamics have looked and whether the government has taken initiatives to support and facilitate social inclusion in the community.  The case study showed that the interviewed IDPs do neither think that the government's free house project has improved their quality of life; neither served the purpose of victim reparation. Furthermore, it became clear that the government had not taken many initiatives to foster coexistence and cooperation between the beneficiaries.
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Ge, Wenjun S. M. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "Social congestion in Shanghai : an urban housing project designed on its sections." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/45961.

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Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 2008.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 61).
The new housing developments of Shanghai rely on high-rise building, demolishing the prevailing low-rise high-density housing, known as Lilong housing, built in the early 20th century, and known as Lilong housing. The high-rise building, a symbol of modern living providing open view, better sanitation facilities, and higher building density, is usually considered to be a positive architectural revolution. The Lilong housing, despite its tranquil appearance sustained over a century, also experienced a revolution, caused by densification resulting from population explosion and poor maintenance of the buildings. Living in extremely tight space, often less than 6 square meters per person, Lilong residents had to find flexible ways of living by modifying and using space in creative ways. The residents built subtle social connections through the intense contacts of their shared lives. People who have moved from Lilong to high-rise when asked to compare their changed lifestyle, usually appreciate the good privacy, generous space, and full facilities in high-rise housing. However, most of them also dislike being isolated and lament their loss of the "big warm family" of old Lilong (Hammond, 2006, p.41). Believing that a good design should bring people together I am searching for an alternative way to develop hyper-dense urban housing to support communal culture while also actively responding to various modern trends.
by Wenjun Ge.
S.M.
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Katamashivili, Ivane. "Shaping the social housing language in europe case of Lisbon, Rio Seco (project), Portugal." Master's thesis, Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Arquitetura, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/18012.

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Dissertação de Mestrado Integrado em Arquitetura, com a especialização em Arquitetura apresentada na Faculdade de Arquitetura da Universidade de Lisboa para obtenção do grau de Mestre.
As origens da Habitação Social, começam com o aumento da população urbana que foi causada pela Revolução Industrial. Grande quantidade de pessoas trabalhando em fábricas, queria ter um espaço acessível. Começou na Inglaterra, em Londres, espalhou-se facilmente outros países industrializados como, França, Holanda, Bélgica e etc. Iniciado em 1914, a ideia de habitação social como forma básica de necessidade de vida para os trabalhadores e depois que se tornou mais organizado no período pós-guerra 1945-1970, era a idade de ouro era da habitação social na Europa. Como um caso de estudo de caso, Lisboa, Portugal em termos de habitação foi em tempo difícil. Lisboa fez a transição da formação antiga para a nova habitação a partir de 1970, necessidade estava subindo escala também da cidade foi crescendo e, finalmente, temos uma vida irregular distritos, como o Rio Seco. A dissertação refere-se a problemas e soluções de Habitação Social na Europa, mostrando vários exemplos construídos em diferentes linhas do tempo, dos anos 80 até agora.
ABSTRACT: The origins of Social Housing, begin with increasing urban population that was caused by Industrial Revolution. Large amount of people working in factories, wanted to have affordable living space. Started in England, London it easily spread in other industrial countries like, France, Netherlands, Belgium and etc. Started in 1914, social housing idea as basic form of living need for workers and after it became more organized in post-war period 1945-1970, it was golden age era of social housing in Europe. As a case study place, Lisbon, Portugal in terms of housing it went in difficult time. Lisbon made transition from old to new housing formation starting from 1970, as need was rising also scale of the city was growing and finally we get irregular living districts, like Rio Seco. The dissertation refers to Social Housing problems and solutions in Europe, showing several examples built in different timeline, from 80s until now.
N/A
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Fox, Nicolette. "Here comes the sun : the evolution of a prosuming project within a social housing estate." Thesis, University of Sussex, 2018. http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/id/eprint/73405/.

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The thesis addresses the research question of how and why ‘prosuming' solar electricity evolves over time among social housing tenants with prepayment electricity meters. Prosuming is defined here as deliberately and simultaneously producing and consuming electricity. Using a Social Practice Theory framework, but also drawing on Time Geography, the thesis analyses prosuming as a ‘project'. This sees practitioners actively mobilising elements (meanings, skills and materials), as well as orchestrating everyday practices (i.e. laundering) and projects (i.e. 'Feeding-the-Meter') to the fulfilment of the 'Prosuming Project'. The overarching research question is ‘How and why does prosuming evolve for social housing tenants?' It is broken down into four subsidiary questions that firstly explore the period before solar panels, and then the three stages of the conceptual framework – adopting, establishing and committing to the Prosuming Project. The first question addresses how householders use electricity prior to the installation of solar panels and the role of two dominant, institutional projects: 'Feeding-the-Meter' and 'Maintaining-Family-Routines'. The second examines the features of households adopting the Prosuming Project and the need to mobilise a set of elements from within a disadvantaged community. The third question explores how the establishing phase is marked by a complex relationship between prosuming as a secondary, voluntary project, and dominant, institutional projects. This is further complicated by the role of synchronicity, finances and the changing seasons. The final subsidiary question addresses how a new vocabulary of elements emerged as practitioners committed to the Prosuming Project. It also explores how a transformative process took place both for practitioner and the project itself. In particular it highlights the potential in the future for an Energy Shifting, Storing, Saving & Sharing Project that could support disadvantaged communities, if they are able to mobilise the elements they need to perform it. This case study adopts an in-depth qualitative methodology, using serial interviews with seven households over ten months. The interviewees live in an area that in 2010 was ranked as within the ten percent most deprived in England, according to English Indices of Deprivation (DCLG). The research explores their lived experiences of the Prosuming Project. The thesis focuses on UK social housing tenants, who appear not to have been researched before for a prosuming-focused, social practice study. This enables the research to contribute to topical debates about future sustainability ‘winners and losers'. It also offers methodological insights into undertaking a social practice case study that explored lived experiences within a disadvantaged community. The research provides insights into how prosuming solar power is embedded in everyday life: how it can be supported or challenged by dominant projects, and how householders may develop new skills, understandings, and ways of using materials as their performances evolve.
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Atkinson, Joellen Marie. "A program evaluation of a structured homeless shelter." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 1996. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/1255.

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This study compared homeless shelters, one was a structured homeless shelter and the other a non-structured homeless shelter, evaluating the residents' level of social functioning and level of self-sufficiency at both shelters. A structured shelter may offer counseling, parenting classes, money management, nutrition classes, a 12-step program and support groups, and after school and summer programs for youths. Whereas a non-structured shelter is one that only offers a place to sleep and some food.
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Parks, Susan Carol. "A needs assessment of the homeless and the lack of affordable housing programs for the homeless." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 2007. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/3297.

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The purpose of this study was to interview the social workers that work with the homeless population within the Inland Empire. Explored were the social workers perceptions of and attitudes about the homeless population as well as hoping to understand the lack of housing for the homeless and to find out what can be done to provide housing for them.
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Mach, Mark Joseph. "Living arrangement as a predictor of identity achievement and adjustment to college." CSUSB ScholarWorks, 1998. https://scholarworks.lib.csusb.edu/etd-project/1564.

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Past research has not established empirical links between living arrangement, identity achievement, and adjustment to college. This study examined the associations of living arrangement on the identity achievement and adjustment to college of first-year college students.
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Books on the topic "Khayalisha social housing project"

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Project girl. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 1999.

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Project girl. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2000.

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Sheehan, Nancy W. Elderly renters project: A model training program for housing and managers and social service professionals. [Washington, D.C.?: U.S. Administration on Aging, 1991.

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Sheehan, Nancy W. Elderly renters project: A model training program for housing and managers and social service professionals. [Washington, D.C.?: U.S. Administration on Aging, 1991.

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Sheehan, Nancy W. Elderly renters project: A model training program for housing and managers and social service professionals. [Washington, D.C.?: U.S. Administration on Aging, 1991.

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Menesini, Ersilia, and Fedele Ruggeri. Quartiere, famiglia e scuola insieme: Un approccio multidimensionale al disagio abitativo e sociale. Milano, Italy: FrancoAngeli, 2014.

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Victoria Mxenge Housing Project (Cape Town, South Africa), ed. The Victoria Mxenge housing project: Women building communities through social activism and informal learning. Claremont [South Africa]: UCT Press, 2015.

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Gong gong zhu fang lang chao: Guo ji mo shi yu Zhongguo an ju gong cheng de dui bi yan jiu = Social housing wave : comparative research on international model and China low-income housing project. Beijing Shi: Ji xie gong ye chu ban she, 2006.

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Architecture for Kutch: Reinterpreting the lifestyle, culture, crafts and architecture of Kutch region in new housing. Mumbai: English Edition, 2003.

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Bastien, Edward. The fighting padre of Zapata: Father Edward Bastien and the Falcon Dam Project. Edited by Rollin Maria F. El Paso, Tex: University of Texas at El Paso, 2003.

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Book chapters on the topic "Khayalisha social housing project"

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Herrera, Rafael, Paloma Pineda, Jorge Roa, Sebastián Cordero, and Álvaro López-Escamilla. "Project AURA: Sustainable Social Housing." In Sustainable Development and Renovation in Architecture, Urbanism and Engineering, 277–87. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51442-0_23.

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Gatti, Simone. "Social Housing in Nova Luz Project." In Learning from the Slums for the Development of Emerging Cities, 105–14. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-31794-6_10.

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Cittadini, Silvia. "Pisa, the project “Città Sottili” (“Thin Cities”)." In Social Justice and Adequate Housing, 49–88. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003184539-3.

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Cittadini, Silvia. "Messina, the project “Casa e/é Lavoro” (House and/is Work)." In Social Justice and Adequate Housing, 89–109. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003184539-4.

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Román, Emilia, Gloria Gómez, and Margarita de Luxán. "Social Rent Housing Refurbishment Demonstrator of LIFE Project “New4Old” (LIFE10 ENV/ES/439)." In Sustainable Development and Renovation in Architecture, Urbanism and Engineering, 203–14. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51442-0_17.

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Pugnaloni, Fausto, and Davide Di Fabio. "“Smart” Social Housing Design: Methods, Tools and Innovation in the Assisted Living Architectural Project." In Ambient Assisted Living, 373–80. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-01119-6_37.

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Biocca, Luigi, Paolo Casacci, Assunta D’Innocenzo, Davide Di Pasquale, Filippo Fabbri, Marialisa Manuzzi, Marco Padula, Nicolò Paraciani, Massimo Pistoia, and Paolo L. Scala. "Smart Technologies in Social Housing: Methodology and First Results of the HOST Project Experimentation Activities." In Ambient Assisted Living, 303–12. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-01119-6_31.

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Harris, Max. "Social Infrastructure in Aotearoa New Zealand: Health, Education and Housing." In The New Zealand Project. Bridget Williams Books, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7810/9780947492588_6.

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Shamsuddin, Shomon, and Lawrence J. Vale. "Holding on to HOPE: Assessing Redevelopment of Boston’s Orchard Park Public Housing Project." In Social Housing and Urban Renewal, 37–68. Emerald Publishing Limited, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/978-1-78714-124-720171001.

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"Housing, Moving and Social Class." In Born in 1953: The story about a post-war Swedish cohort, and a longitudinal research project, 127–33. Stockholm University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.16993/bav.i.

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Conference papers on the topic "Khayalisha social housing project"

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Sano, Natsuki, Sari Aoki, and Yusuke Ariyoshi. "Social Media Marketing for Regional Activation: Case Study on the Onomichi Vacant Housing Renewal Project." In 2018 5th Asia-Pacific World Congress on Computer Science and Engineering (APWC on CSE). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/apwconcse.2018.00019.

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Mitrovic, Biserka. "THE CHANCES FOR ACHIEVING URBAN SOCIAL COHESION: CASE STUDY OF BELGRADE INFORMAL SETTLEMENT AS A PILOT PROJECT FOR NEW SOCIAL HOUSING." In 14th SGEM GeoConference on NANO, BIO AND GREEN � TECHNOLOGIES FOR A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE. Stef92 Technology, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2014/b62/s27.087.

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Zhou, Hong, Yijin Zeng, and Bin Han. "Research on the Ex-Post Evaluation of a Social Affordable Housing Project: A Case Study of Xiamen." In ICCREM 2015. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784479377.097.

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Minaev, Nikolay, Irina Sharf, Christina Filyushina, Natalia Gusakova, Olga Dobrynina, Ekaterina Zharova, Julia Merkulieva, and Natalya Dmitrieva. "Formation of the organizational model for the implementation of low-rise housing investment project and evaluation of interaction effectiveness of its actors." In Information Technologies in Science, Management, Social Sphere and Medicine. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/itsmssm-16.2016.38.

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Horn, Pawel. "RESPONSIVE ARCHITECTURE AS THE FIRST STEP TOWARDS SUSTAINABLE DESIGN ON EXAMPLE OF EUROPEAN CAPITAL OF CULTURE WROCLAW 2016 PROJECT OF MODEL HOUSING ESTATE." In 2nd International Multidisciplinary Scientific Conference on Social Sciences and Arts SGEM2015. Stef92 Technology, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgemsocial2015/b41/s15.073.

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Peltola, Toni. "Urban Housing PARIS: Town/Building/ Apartment." In 1995 ACSA International Conference. ACSA Press, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.intl.1995.6.

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The project starts from the idea that to build a town and to build a dwelling emerge from the same principle – the attempt to define the limits of our way of living. The triptych of town, building, and apartment participates to this definition in stages from the intimacy of apartment to the environment of the nearest neighborhood and all the way to the making of the city. The architectural project defines itself also as a social project dealing with the inhabitants’ relation to the other individuals and to the society. The site is located between Zac Rue de Flandre Sud development area and the vast open space ofthe railroad yard of Gare de I ‘Est on the north side of the lively Boulevard de la Villette. The broken context of the turn-of-the-century working class housing is collected with a physical incision to the urban fabric. Green line – park – forms an oasis in the city life and creates public space in the quarter. Visually a whole, the park is divided into parts for each respective block and raised a little above the street level. The nature is set in the architectural frame. It is presented as a different space – living and seemingly homogeneous and confronted with the mix of buildings. The changes along the seasons condition the atmosphere of the park, which is opposite to the stability of the living buildings.
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Ochoa, Jose M., Irene Marincic, Maria G. Alpuche, Sofia Canseco, and Ana C. Borbon. "Bioclimatic and Energy Efficiency Considerations for Social Housing: A Case Study in Hot Dry Climate." In ASME 2011 5th International Conference on Energy Sustainability. ASMEDC, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/es2011-54552.

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The development of social housing In Mexico during the last decade has been supported by the different levels of government (federal, state, and municipal) in order to assist low-income families. The accelerated construction that takes place in order to address the housing deficit causes a reduction in the quality of design and construction, which is also affected by rising building costs. Environmental comfort conditions inside the dwellings are reduced drastically when houses are constructed without considering climate conditions, especially in hot arid regions. This situation generates uncomfortable thermal conditions for users and high-energy costs due to the unavoidable need of air conditioning. User profiles, architectural program, comfort preferences and guidelines for design and construction of future dwellings in the city of Hermosillo, in northwest Mexico, were determined by surveying beneficiaries of government affordable housing programs. One survey measured the degree of satisfaction of inhabitants in a sample of over 370 households; a second survey sampled 200 households and was aimed at determining aspects of comfort. This paper describes the results of thermal simulations carried out on two housing models. The first model represents the type usually constructed by commercial developers, and the second is a proposal developed by the research team according to guidelines based on the results of the research project described before. This study is a preliminary step in the construction of a physical model for experimental research and demonstration.
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Borghi, M., G. Ferri, and A. Pavesi. "The experimental project of spread “social housing” of Real Estate Fund Ca’ Granda. Construction of a synthetic index for the implementation of the mobility plan." In The 10th EAAE/ARCC International Conference. Taylor & Francis Group, 6000 Broken Sound Parkway NW, Suite 300, Boca Raton, FL 33487-2742: CRC Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781315226255-15.

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Ameijde, Jeroen van, and Zineb Sentissi. "Pay-as-you-go City’: New Forms of Domesticity in a Technological Society." In International Conference on the 4th Game Set and Match (GSM4Q-2019). Qatar University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.29117/gsm4q.2019.0012.

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Ongoing urbanization, combined with market fundamentalism as the prevailing mode of political management, is leading to the spatial and social segregation of economic classes in cities. The housing market, being driven by economic interests rather than public policy, favors inflexible forms of ownership or tenancy that are increasingly incompatible with the more diverse forms of live-work patterns and family structures occurring in the society. This paper presents a research-by-design project that explores a speculative future scenario of housing, based on current developments in digital technologies and their impact on the mobility and accessibility to services enjoyed by urban residents. It references technology platforms that underpin the 'sharing economy' or 'gig economy', such as 'pay-as-you-go' car and bike sharing programs or internet and smartphone-based services for taxis or temporary accommodation. The study explores how new forms of participation in the housing market could circumvent the current segregation of different communities across the city. It describes a speculative system of distributed residential spaces, accessible to all on a 'pay-for-time-used' basis. By offering freedom of choice across domestic functions of greater range and accessibility than found within existing housing or hotel accommodation, the system would enable opportunistic or nomadic forms of living linked to the dynamic spatio-temporal occurrences of social, cultural or economic opportunities. The research references how new forms of social networking create new challenges and opportunities to participate in communities and explores how new technologies, applied to housing, can help to find a 'sense of belonging' within the technological society.
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Ferrante, Annarita, Fabrizio Ungaro, Giovanni Semprini, Lorna Dragonetti, Elettra Agliardi, and Anastasia Fotopoulou. "Deep renovation up to zero energy through Add-ons: the ABRACADABRA Project." In IABSE Congress, New York, New York 2019: The Evolving Metropolis. Zurich, Switzerland: International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineering (IABSE), 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/newyork.2019.0252.

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<p>and international projects</p><p>various EU H2020 projects</p><p>Though housing is one of the most energy consumer sectors, it is currently extremely underestimated, because of a clear investment gap due to economic, social and legislative barriers. The EU project ABRACADABRA (Assistant Building to Retrofit, Adopt, Cure And Develop the Actual Buildings up to zeRo energy, Activating a market for deep renovation) is based on the idea that the real estate value increase given by the appropriate densification strategy in urban environments could be an opportunity to activate a market for deep energy renovation. To prove the effectiveness of the strategy more than 70 case studies throughout the EU cities have been assessed by means of a cost-effective analysis. Basing on the parametric variation of the different values involved (cost of construction, energy, etc.) the benefit of this strategy has been proved in the majority of the different building types and contexts.</p><p>More interestingly, the ABRA strategy has been simulated and tested outside Europe in order to verify its scalability and the possibility of considering other non-energy related benefits in the renovation of the existing building stock. A specific study on the NYC urban context has been conducted to effectively adapt the strategy and combine the global drivers of energy consumption reduction and CO<span>2</span> emission reduction with the local need of combating flood emergency and related flood-proofing measures.</p><p>The results reached by this work demonstrate how the energy retrofit trough add-ons reduces significantly the payback times of the investments, preserve soil consumption, while providing a extraordinary opportunity to enhance urban resiliency by challenging the local emergencies.</p>
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