Academic literature on the topic 'Life Architecture'

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Journal articles on the topic "Life Architecture"

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Su, Hong Zhi. "Systems Scientific Analysis of Architecture Adaptability Design." Applied Mechanics and Materials 744-746 (March 2015): 2165–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.744-746.2165.

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Architecture is the arena on which man's life unfolds, due to the constant changes taking place in life, deformability is demanded to increase the adaptability of modern Architecture. Thus, to achieve such deformability, research on the systematic hierarchy of architectures is carried out; indicating that the hierarchies are the intermediary of the inner transformation of the architecture and the formation process of architecture system is a process of gradual differentiation. With the development of the gradual differentiation process, the flexibility of architecture begins to fail while increasing its determinacy. The key point determining the adaptability of architectures lies in the inter-transformation between the various levels of sub-hierarchy systems. According to the complexity and hierarchy of the transformation, categorization and analysis with future study on the performance manifestation of architectural adaptability design are implemented.
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Weaver, Thomas. "The Death and Life of Theory." Materia Arquitectura, no. 16 (December 28, 2017): 117. http://dx.doi.org/10.56255/ma.v0i16.363.

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This essay challenges a contemporary understanding of theory, largely through the assertion that architecture becomes servile when only read theoretically. It explains some of the conceptions involved in the editing of the long-running journal AA Files, among them the preferential treatment this publication gives to history, and makes a more fundamental argument that architecture does not need the appliqué of philosophy because multiple ideas and allusions are already embedded within it. Nevertheless, it recognises that among all of architecture’s various objects is theory itself. Following Alberti’s distinction between theory and practice it argues that any form of architectural production not in the form of building is therefore by definition a theory.
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Kabashkin, Igor, and Sergey Glukhikh. "Life Cycle Cost Model for Life Support Systems of Crewed Autonomous Transport for Deep Space Habitation." Applied Sciences 13, no. 14 (2023): 8213. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/app13148213.

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Intelligent transport systems are used in various transport systems, among which a special place is occupied by crewed autonomous transport systems such as space stations for deep space habitation. These objects have a complex and critical requirement for life support systems (LSSs) to maintain safe and habitable conditions for the crew in the isolated environment. This paper explores the different architectural options for life support systems (LSSs) in autonomous transport systems, specifically focusing on space stations. Three alternative LSS architectures are discussed: Open LSS (OLSS), Closed LSS (CLSS), and Mixed LSS (MLSS). Each architecture has its own advantages and disadvantages. OLSS relies on external resource delivery, reducing initial costs but increasing dependence on resupply missions. CLSS operates autonomously, generating resources onboard, but has higher initial costs and technological complexity. MLSS combines external delivery and onboard generation, providing flexibility and adaptability. The material emphasizes the importance of cost-effectiveness analysis at the early stages of design and identifies the boundary values of mission duration that determine the most effective LSS architecture choice. The material highlights the significance of striking the right balance between cost and performance to develop intelligent ecosystems of LSS for space stations and other autonomous transport systems.
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Wu, Xiaowen, and Claudio Gambadella. "Religions Culture Sharps the Space." Resourceedings 2, no. 3 (2019): 184. http://dx.doi.org/10.21625/resourceedings.v2i3.658.

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Religious culture shapes the characters of space and it reflects people’s attitudes towards the relationships between people and gods. Every religious architecture, such as a temple or a church, demonstrates its physical connections with life. This paper focuses on comparing different countries’ religious architectures to better understand the dominant cultural elements which influence design concepts of these architectures. In Western cultures, the religious architecture format is the church. However, Tadao Ando designs the Church of the Light with oriental features. It changes western religious cultures to adapt to local conditions. Ando’s work is just one of many examples in which the local culture can transform religious architecture form with their own characters, and nake it become an iconic mark to represent their country. This paper, analyzing project thinking and development invovling a local citizen, user, artist, and architect, tries to find out how design concepts, decisions on site location, and construction method will be determined. In these case studies on architectural formats from all over the world, this paper uses valuable data to show what elements will be the most critical ones to influence people’s thinking about religious cultures and religious architectural transformation. Furthermore, in this research, it compares religious cultural characters between western and oriental regions. This research also answers questions about how cultures change local people’s behaviors. This is the most valuable point of religious architectures, because they can comfort people and mitigate their sorrow. The research demonstrates how religious cultures and understanding about life can further develop architecture forms. Local materials and conditions are key factors which greatly influence architectural designs. Moreover, this paper compares the latest technology and development of construction materials to illustrate how technology reshapes religious designs in our age. It links local cultures with contemporary architectures to help local architectures continue to develop with their unique characters instead of being eliminated by globalization.
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Shapiro, Michael J. "Architecture as event space: Violence, securitisation, and resistance." European Journal of International Security 4, no. 3 (2019): 366–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/eis.2019.13.

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AbstractCentral to the conception of this article is the architectural theorist Bernard Tschumi's dictum, ‘There is no architecture without action, no architecture without events, no architecture without program … no architecture without violence.’ Shaped as well by Eyal Weizman's conception of ‘forensic architecture’, the focus of the investigation is on Israel's architecture of security and on the corresponding Palestinian architecture of resistance. Emphasising an encounter of cartographies that reveals the way Palestinians make life livable in response to the architectural violence they face, the analysis continues with reference to Yari Sharif's analysis of architectures of resistance and with a reading of a feature film, Hany Abu-Assad's Omar (2013) in which the Separation Wall between Israel and Palestine is one of the film's primary agent/protagonists. The article surveys popular culture texts, focused on crime and espionage to analyse a range of security practices and breaches that amplify the analysis with attention to security issues in individual households, multiple-person dwelling arrangements, architectural locations throughout cities, and buildings housing governmental security agencies. That trajectory of architectural sites lends a micropolitical analysis to the macropolitical level of governmental policy and modes of resistance to it.
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Purwanto, L. M. F., and Reginaldo Chistophori Lake. "Architecture and culture, architecture grows." ARTEKS : Jurnal Teknik Arsitektur 6, no. 2 (2021): 155–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.30822/arteks.v6i2.1269.

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Architecture is one part of culture, which reflects the development of human life from time to time and displays various types of life (Sharr 2012). The embodiment of architectural studies can appear in various perspectives, such as the study of technology, symbols, open space, landscape, interior and also architectural education, as in the articles of ARTEKS in this edition volume 6 issue 2, August 2021.
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BALLANTYNE, ANDREW. "Architecture, Life, and Habit." Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 69, no. 1 (2011): 43–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1540-6245.2010.01445.x.

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Upton, Dell. "Architecture in Everyday Life." New Literary History 33, no. 4 (2002): 707–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/nlh.2002.0046.

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Ferry, Georgina. "Architecture: Life in stone." Nature 489, no. 7414 (2012): 29–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/489029a.

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Ingber, Donald E. "The Architecture of Life." Scientific American 278, no. 1 (1998): 48–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/scientificamerican0198-48.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Life Architecture"

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Snider, David E. "Architecture is Life... ...Life is Architecture." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2001. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/31734.

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When thinking about architecture, I cannot help but think about my life and the things that have affected my life. How does the environment around us effect the daily decisions we make? How do the experiences throughout our life impact who we are and who we become? The people and surroundings we choose will ultimately decide the type of people we become. When we select our surroundings we are in turn selecting our ideal community. Everyone is trying to achieve community in some sense, from individuals to city planners. Council members, politicians, city officials... make decisions everyday based on their idea of what community is to them and their citizens. <p> In the following pages I will design a community and put in place the elements for it to prosper and grow...<br>Master of Architecture
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Carey, Katherine Elizabeth. "Architecture and the motion of life." Thesis, Montana State University, 2009. http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/2009/carey/CareyK1209.pdf.

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We experience our world through the mobile unit that is our body. As we move through space we are experiencing the riches that make up life. We meet new friends, travel new roads, and see wondrous sights. If architecture is used as a tool to encourage these movements it stands to be conceived that architecture can promote the enrichment of life.
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Flucke, Josefine. "Architecture of defence, preservation of life." Master's thesis, Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Arquitetura, 2019. http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/19074.

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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.<br>This final work consists of an architectural rehabilitation project of a military ruin in Portugal. The re-invention, the re-thinking of places connected to a time of war are important tasks in the current architectural discussion. Those forgotten sites have kept precious landscapes untouched from overbuilding, and with their strange structures created sites of value today. Transforming a military building, a new use for the site needs to be discovered and the place needs to be adapted to this use. The proposal of this work re-thinks the original intention of the building, the intention of protecting the coastline and the river entrance of the city of Lisbon and transforms the use into a positive protection. A “European Institute for Marine Biology and Ocean and Environmental Protection” is developed in this work. With the current environmental situation being in a crisis, the creation of an institute which focusses on protecting ecosystems and initiating ocean and coastal rehabilitation , the topic of this work fits into the current global discussion. It deals with the creation of necessary infrastructures for environmental protection, as well as the adaptation of military spaces to laboratory uses.With the addition of architectural elements, gestures and spatial qualities of the new building are carefully chosen, based on an interpretation of the elements found at the site and within the original building. The objective of this work is to establish a connection of an existing architecture with the now, understand its important elements for the history of a culture, restore its valued qualities and at the same time create a future orientated site in symbiosis with the natural landscape.<br>N/A
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Ditzel, Allie. "Thresholds: End of Life and Architecture." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/73783.

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The ultimate threshold state of a human life is the time preceding death. Hospice care provides a gateway environment for many people for their transition to the other side. Societies throughout history have had rituals and traditions to support the dying and their loved ones, but for modern society, few of these rituals remain. Death has become a topic to avoid "no one wants to look at it or speak about it. This taboo treatment of death often results in the isolation of people at the end of their lives. It also has a major impact on those who are losing their loved ones, as well as the caregivers that deal with death on a daily basis. Through the lens of hospice, this thesis will explore spaces of transition in architecture - the idea of thresholds, both physical and emotional. It seeks to develop a design that considers all of its users and their experience of death and dying.<br>Master of Architecture
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Lagerkvist, Carl. "Slice of Life." Thesis, KTH, Arkitektur, 2021. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-291759.

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An attempt to renegotiate the typology of a functionally separate administrative building by integrating the stacked infrastructure of movement built into the site and introducing new programs that are naturally occurring in Tensta in spite of the inflexible urban context. The building signifies a point of convergence between the different types of traffic and bridges between them, revealing latent connectivity and opening up for a gradual take-over of traffic systems as general patterns of behaviour change.  The will to make the building an urban move stems from thoughts about the welfare state architecture as a continuous megastructure, including the subway, Systembolag, Folktandvården, and much more. The municipality building generally separates itself from this continuity, physically and in turn in the public’s perception of it. The goal was to investigate the implications when it comes to how a member of the public perceives a more municipality building that is more integrated in the urban fabric.<br>Mitt projekt utgår från tankar kring välfärdsstatens arkitektur och hur den generellt ser ut och upplevs. Det finns många delar av det som vi inte reflekterar över utan bara passerar genom, i tunnelbanan, systembolag etc. medans det i andra fall blir mer påtagligt. Att besöka en myndighetsbyggnad är ett sådant tillfälle. Oavsett retoriken som används är en myndighetsbyggnad inte en aktivt demokratisk plats, utan en plats dit medborgarna går för att vara passiva mottagare av politiska beslut. Vid inträdandet passeras en subtil gräns där individen går från sin vanliga autonomi till att sätta sig i händerna på ett kollektivt strukturerande system. Den här gränsen där individen gör ett utträde ur sin upplevda individualism och tar steget in det kollektiva är en viktig gestaltningsfråga.     I mitt projekt ville jag ifrågasätta stadsdelshusets typologi som funktionsseparerad byggnad och snarare se det som infrastrukturobjekt där rörelsen genom byggnaden och inslag av vardag skulle kunna marmorera strukturen och vara dess huvudsakliga motiv. Min förhoppning var att det skulle kunna förmildra känslan av att träda in i en främmande sfär där man gör avkall på sin autonomi.
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Willey, Guy Phillip. "Site and still life." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1993. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/70662.

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Thesis (M. Arch.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 1993.<br>Includes bibliographical references (p. 59).<br>This thesis uses the still life as a medium for investigating architecture and the city . An analogy is established between what the thesis defines as still life and an urban composition (a site in East Cambridge). Through this analogy a specific understanding of architecture, site, and still life is explored. The analogy is used as a descriptive tool allowing the painting subject matter to be treated architecturally and architecture to be treated in a painterly manner. The site is analyzed as a still life to guide operational moves throughout the design exercise and to increase the experience of the site as both subject and object.<br>by Guy Phillip Willey.<br>M.Arch.
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NOLL, MICHAEL PAUL. "VERTICAL LIFE: RECONFIGURED." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2003. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1053691715.

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Carabelli, Giulia. "Readdressing Mostar : the architecture of everyday life." Thesis, Queen's University Belfast, 2013. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.600631.

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This thesis investigates the process of post-war reconstruction in Mostar (Bosnia and Herzegovina), particularly focusing on the post reunification phase (since 2004). Drawing on the theory of "the production of space", as elaborated by Henri Lefebvre, this project explores the ways in which the urban space is produced socially . By re-appropriating Lefebvre's methodological tool of the spatial triad, this research investigates both the ways in which space is imagined, designed, and built at the level of political administration, and the various practices through which this space is re-appropriated, experienced, and lived in everyday life in order to produce a more complex account of the post-war rehabilitation process. Hence, this project adopts an ethnographic perspective to explore the ways in which space is produced (and reproduced) in the quotidian of Mostar to engage with the extent of its polarisation in everyday life. Accordingly, the project sets out the question of how Mostar becomes a divided city by critically engaging with how the city is administered, planned, represented (in political and academic discourses) and also the ways in which the city• is lived and used by the citizens. Empirical evidence of this research shows that Mostar is not merely a divided city but also a shared space and, more importantly, a platform for the activities of engaged actors in Civil society working towards a more just (and shared) future (in the city and beyond). As a general conclusion, this thesis argues that investigations about Mostar should start by unravelling the multifarious dynamics that produce its space as complex, rather than picturing the city as solely divided (or united) . Furthermore, this project suggests that more investigations about Mostar should engage with its spaces of resistance in order to share the story of those who are already producing change.
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Goldman, Anna Scott. "Architecture as the background to collective life." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24367.

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This project develops an approach towards the arrangement and design of the primary elements - public facilities and spaces - that necessarily complement the provision of subsidised housing in South Africa. The historical response to the housing shortage in South Africa has been the provision of a remarkable number of individual housing units, but with insufficient funds and attention given to the urban infrastructure, public spaces and facilities that go hand in hand with housing in livable urban environments. This project considers a subsidy housing project where the social facilities are considered upfront, and are seen as an opportunity to create interesting, people-centred places in the development - this thesis is the search for an architecture which forms the backdrop, and framework for growth, for collective urban life. This paper is structured around six sections: thinking, siting, urban design, programming, making and designing. These sections explore, respectively, the theoretical proposal with regards to social facilities and public spaces, the strategic siting of an area of subsidised housing and its associated primary elements, an urban design proposal for the whole development, the programming of the whole site and the individual cluster of facilities that I consider in more detail, the spatial and technological realisation of the public fronts of three case study buildings, and finally the exploration and manifestation of these ideas through a design. My project is being done in conjunction with another student, Rob Richardson, who is looking at creative housing within the limit of the government subsidy. Together we make a proposal for an overall living environment which takes the form of an acupunctural insertion of subsidised housing and the associated primary elements into an area of Wynburg, Cape Town.
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Villeré, Mariel A. (Mariel Anaïse Kathryn). "Life behind ruins : constructing documenta." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/82286.

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Thesis (S.M. in Architecture Studies)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 2013.<br>Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. Page 121 blank.<br>Includes bibliographical references (p. 113-120).<br>A transnational index of contemporary art, documenta in its current form is known in the art world for its scale, site-specificity and rotating Artistic Directors, each with their own theme and agenda. On a unique schedule, the expansive show is displayed in Kassel, Germany from June to September every five years. The origins of the exhibition-event are embedded in the postwar reconstruction of West Germany and a regenerative national Garden Show. This thesis focuses on the architectural condition of the first documenta in 1955, which I argue has ultimately shaped the nomadic and parceled form of documenta as it evolved. In a liminal space between a violent, isolated history and a hopeful, democratic future, the organizers of documenta appropriated the damaged, but centrally located Museum Fridericianum as shelter for an exhibition of modern art. I trace the early history of the siting and architecture of the Museum Fridericianum and central urban plaza, the Friedrichsplatz, to unfold the urban planning schemes and controversies of the 1940s and 50s. In the midst of re-planning, the national Garden Show- the Bundesgartenschau, a catalyst for economic regeneration as a tourist attraction and proponent of urban parks, offered the support needed for the germinating plans for an art show that would be called documenta. Arnold Bode, a designer, painter and professor at the Art Academy in Kassel took advantage of the Bundesgartenschau exposure and funding to install an exhibition of modern art in the damaged neoclassical Museum Fridericianum. Although the details of the building's restoration are often overlooked, the thesis examines the built conditions of Bode's Fridericianum in an attempt to reposition documenta in the history of architecture. I argue for the influence of Kassel's urban and landscape history on the staging of documenta, and in turn, the exhibition's dialogue with the form and ideology of the Bundesgartenschau. In displaying the architecture as part of the exhibition, Bode resurrected the Enlightenment ideology that birthed the building and reinterpreted it for a postwar message. Now one among many biennial format global exhibitions, documenta offers a unique and compelling confluence between the subject's relationship with landscape, urban design, architecture, exhibition design and art, based on its inception in 1955 in the Museum Fridericianum.<br>by Mariel A. Villeré.<br>S.M.in Architecture Studies
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Books on the topic "Life Architecture"

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Reuzé, Sébastien, and Hubert van Lier. Architecture for life. La Lettre Volée, 2011.

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Ireland, Tim. From Life to Architecture, to Life. Springer International Publishing, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-45925-2.

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Lewis, Penny, Lorens Holm, and Sandra Costa Santos. Architecture and Collective Life. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003118985.

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Nicholas, Kenyon, Saumarez Smith Otto, Leigh Mike, et al., eds. Barbican: Life, history, architecture. Barbican Art Gallery, 2014.

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Harwood, Elain. Sixties life style architecture. Twentieth Century Society, 1997.

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Coxon, Nicola. Sixties life style architecture. Twentieth Century Society, 1997.

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Timo, Tuomi, ed. Tapiola: Life and architecture. Rakennustieto, 2003.

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service), SpringerLink (Online, ed. Biomimetics in Architecture: Architecture of Life and Buildings. Springer-Verlag Vienna, 2011.

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Colvin, Howard Montagu. Architecture and the after-life. Yale University Press, 1991.

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Warren, Miles. Miles: A life in architecture. Miles Warren, 2010.

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Book chapters on the topic "Life Architecture"

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Kickert, Conrad, and Hans Karssenberg. "Commercial Life." In Street-Level Architecture. Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003041887-7.

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Ireland, Timothy. "Architecture and Life." In Biosemiotics. Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-45925-2_6.

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Tsigkas, Alexander. "Life in Architecture." In Between Theory and Practice in Architectural Design. Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003369844-3.

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Kickert, Conrad, and Hans Karssenberg. "Life Beyond Transactions." In Street-Level Architecture. Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003041887-8.

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Goodricke, Daniel, and Luke Murray. "Health and Life Safety." In Architecture Apprenticeship Handbook. RIBA Publishing, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003532743-4.

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Dragonetti, Lorna. "Life Cycle Thinking/Life Cycle Phase." In TEMPORARY: Citizenship, Architecture and City. Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-36667-3_16.

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Hill, Jonathan. "Life in ruins." In The Architecture of Ruins. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429429644-7.

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Ireland, Timothy. "Computing Life and Architecture." In Biosemiotics. Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-45925-2_4.

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Boehm, Barry, Dan Port, Alexander Egyed, and Marwan Abi-Antoun. "The MBASE Life Cycle Architecture Milestone Package." In Software Architecture. Springer US, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-387-35563-4_30.

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Goodricke, Daniel, and Luke Murray. "Professional life beyond the apprenticeship." In Architecture Apprenticeship Handbook. RIBA Publishing, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003532743-10.

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Conference papers on the topic "Life Architecture"

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Liu, Qian, Meilin Wang, Bingo Wing-Kuen Ling, and Juntao Ding. "Heart rate estimation based on two layer long short term memory network inspired by random forest architecture." In 2024 IEEE Consumer Life Tech (ICLT). IEEE, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1109/iclt63507.2024.11038638.

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şerpar, Ariana-Andra. "Prepared for Lift-Off: Hybrid CNN-LSTM Architecture for Aircraft Engine Remaining Useful Life Estimation." In 2024 26th International Symposium on Symbolic and Numeric Algorithms for Scientific Computing (SYNASC). IEEE, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1109/synasc65383.2024.00066.

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Estévez, Alberto T. "Application of Life Information in Architecture: Biodigital Architecture and Genetics." In ACADIA 2010: LIFE in:formation. ACADIA, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.52842/conf.acadia.2010.168.

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Perry, Chris. "Anticipatory Architecture | Extrapolative Design." In ACADIA 2010: LIFE in:formation. ACADIA, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.52842/conf.acadia.2010.305.

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Sabucedo, Luis, and Luis Rifon. "Life Event Oriented Architecture." In 2006 IEEE Services Computing Workshops. IEEE, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/scw.2006.26.

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Jun-Mei Wang. "How to live a low carbon life." In 3rd International Conference on Contemporary Problems in Architecture and Construction. IET, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/cp.2011.1279.

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Mungkung, R., S. Intrachooto, N. Srisuwanpip, A. Lamai, K. Sorakon, and K. Kittipakornkarn. "Life cycle assessment of Hempstone for green buildings." In ECO-ARCHITECTURE 2016. WIT Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/arc160181.

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Molchanov, Nikolai Alekseevich. "Components of architecture in the discipline "Life Safety"." In International Scientific and Practical Conference. Publishing house Sreda, 2025. https://doi.org/10.31483/r-126604.

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The article examines the key components of architecture integrated into the discipline of &amp;quot;Life Safety&amp;quot; in order to ensure the safety of the urban environment and increase the sustainability of buildings. Rational organization of space, energy-efficient and autonomous life support systems, fire safety, environmental sustainability and inclusive design are the main aspects influencing architectural decisions. Modern design approaches that take into account natural and man-made risks, as well as the impact of the urban environment on human safety and comfort, are analyzed. The methods of increasing the resilience of buildings to emergency situations are considered, including the use of fire-resistant materials, intelligent control systems, safe transport solutions and barrier-free architecture. The article highlights the importance of introducing innovative technologies into architectural design, which contributes to the formation of a safe, functional and environmentally friendly enviro
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Bt Omar, D. "Urban planning and the quality of life in Putrajaya, Malaysia." In ECO-ARCHITECTURE 2006. WIT Press, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/arc060091.

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Di Raimo, Antonino. "Architecture as Caregiver: Human Body - Information - Cognition." In ACADIA 2010: LIFE in:formation. ACADIA, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.52842/conf.acadia.2010.110.

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Reports on the topic "Life Architecture"

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Kazman, Rick, Robert L. Nord, and Mark Klein. A Life-Cycle View of Architecture Analysis and Design Methods. Defense Technical Information Center, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada421679.

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Waisel, Yoav, Bobbie McMichael, and Amram Eshel. Decision Making within Plant Root Systems. United States Department of Agriculture, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.32747/1996.7613030.bard.

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Architecture of a root system is the expression of the potential of various root types to branch, to grow and to coordinate with other plant organs, under the specific limitations of the environmental conditions. The present investigation has proven the following points. 1) Genotypes with different types of root systems were identified. The growth patterns of their roots and the distribution of laterals along their main axes were recorded. 2) The patterns of development of the root systems of four cotton genotypes, throughout the entire life cycle of the plants, were described, even at such a late stage of development when the total length of the roots exceeded two kilometers. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time that an analysis of this type is accomplished. 3) The development of root systems under restrictive soil conditions were compared with those that have developed under the non-restrictive conditions of aeroponics. Results indicate that in the absence of the mechanical impedance of the soil, cotton plants develop single roots that reach the length of 6 m, and have a total root length of 2000 m. Thus, root growth is strongly inhibited by the soil, with some root types being inhibited more than others. 4) One of the important decisions, in constructing an operational root system architecture of mature plants, is the shift of the balance between various root fractions in favor of the very fine roots. 5) Root system architecture is determined, in part, by the sites of initiation of the lateral roots. This is determined genetically by the number of xylem archs and by the totuosity of the stele. Selection for such traits should be sought.
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Armitage, James W. Process Guide for the Domain-Specific Software Architectures (DSSA) Process Life Cycle. Defense Technical Information Center, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada275642.

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O'Brien, Liam. Architecture Reconstruction to Support a Product Line Effort: Case Study. Defense Technical Information Center, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada388794.

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Cui, Y., Q. Sun, M. Boucadair, T. Tsou, Y. Lee, and I. Farrer. Lightweight 4over6: An Extension to the Dual-Stack Lite Architecture. RFC Editor, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.17487/rfc7596.

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Pople, John A. Novel Dendrimer-Like Star Copolymer Architectures Investigated with Scattering Techniques. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/798895.

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Kapulnik, Yoram, Maria J. Harrison, Hinanit Koltai, and Joseph Hershenhorn. Targeting of Strigolacatones Associated Pathways for Conferring Orobanche Resistant Traits in Tomato and Medicago. United States Department of Agriculture, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.32747/2011.7593399.bard.

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This proposal is focused on examination of two plant interactions: parasitic with Orobanche, and symbiosis with arbuscular mycorrhiza fungi (AMF), and the involvement of a newly define plant hormones, strigolactones (SLs), in these plant interactions. In addition to strigolactones role in regulation of above-ground plant architecture, they are also known to be secreted from roots, and to be a signal for seed germination of the parasitic plants Orobanche. Moreover, secreted strigolactones were recognized as inducers of AMFhyphae branching. The present work was aimed at Generation of RNAi mutants of both tomato and Medicago, targeting multiple genes that may be involved in strigolactone production, carotenoid biosynthesis pathway, Pi signaling or other metabolic pathways, and hence affect AMF colonization and/or Orobanche resistance. Following the newly formed and existing RNAi mutants were examined for AMF colonization and Orobanche resistance. At the first phase of this project Orobanche seed germination assays and AMF colonization were examined in intact plants. These assays were shown to be effective and resulted with enhancement of Orobanche seed germination and AMF colonization in WT tomato plants, whereas roots of strigolactones impaired lines did not result with Orobanche seed germination and mycorrhiza colonization. Unexpectedly, root organ cultures (ROC) that were produced from the same wild type (WT) and mutant lines did not induce the Orobanche seed germination and AMFhyphal branching. This implies that under in vitro conditions ROC cultures are missing an important component for induction of Orobanche seed germination and AMFhyphal branching. In another line of experiments we have tested transgenic lines of Medicagotruncatula for AMFhuyphal branching and Orobanche seed germination assays. These lines included lines silenced for a GRAS transcription factor (RNAi 1845), an NBS-LRR type resistance gene (RNAi 1847), a kinase (RNAi 2403) and a protein of unknown function (RNAi 2417). In all cases, five independent transgenic root lines showed altered AMFphenotypes with reduced or aberrant colonization patterns. Following, we transformed tomato plants with the M. truncatulaTC 127050 PhosphoinositidekinaseRNAi construct. Transgenic lines that contained GUS constructs were used as control. All transgenic lines showed reduced level of Orobanche seed germination, masking any strigoalctones-specific effect. The research demonstrated that SLs production may not be examined in ROC –based bioassays. It was shown by the 3 independent assays employed in this project that none of the recognized characters of SLs may be reflected in these bioassays. However, when the whole plant root exudates were examined, SLs activity in root exudates was demonstrated. Hence, it can be concluded that the presence of an intact shoot, and possibly, shoot factors, may be necessary for production of SLs in roots. Another point of interest that rises from these results is that the presence of SLs is not necessary for AMF completion of life cycle. Hence, it may be concluded that SLs are important for AMFhyphal branching, before symbiosis, but not essential for AMF colonization and life cycle completion under ROC system conditions.
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Clemente, Paul, and John Bergey. The U.S. Army's Common Avionics Architecture System (CAAS) Product Line: A Case Study. Defense Technical Information Center, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada444361.

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Dabkowski, Matthew, and Ricardo Valerdi. The Budding SV3: Estimating the Cost of Architectural Growth Early in the Life Cycle. Defense Technical Information Center, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada624710.

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Holland, Mark, Garth A. Gibson, and Daniel P. Siewiorek. Architectures and Algorithms for On-Line Failure Recovery in Redundant Disk Arrays. Defense Technical Information Center, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada278935.

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