Academic literature on the topic 'Urban interior'

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Journal articles on the topic "Urban interior"

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Gou, Zhonghua. "Green building for office interiors: challenges and opportunities." Facilities 34, no. 11/12 (August 1, 2016): 614–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/f-04-2015-0022.

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Purpose This paper aims to examine the concept and practice of green building for office interiors: whether the green intent can be effectively implemented in an interior retrofitting project. Design/methodology/approach Reviewing green building rating systems for interiors, examining certified interior projects and interviewing occupants working in certified green offices. Findings The green building credits for interiors fall into three relational layers: the urban context, the host building and interior fit-outs. Most projects under study performed well on credits for interior fit-outs (e.g. low emitting materials, energy efficient equipment and appliances, etc.), while underperformed on credits for its host building (e.g. air-conditioning systems, ventilation, etc.). The latter might more significantly affect working experience. The other important green aspects, such as daylight availability, facilities accessibility, might be subject to its location and urban context. Research limitations/implications This article presents a multi-examination of green interiors. The data came from second-hand Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design scorecards and qualitative interviews. More quantitative surveys are expected to be conducted. Practical implications Green interior retrofitting should go beyond selecting environmental-friendly finishes and furniture or resource-efficient fixtures and appliances. It should proactively start from assessing the environmental performance of the host building and its urban context. Originality/value Most research looked at green building as a whole. Green interiors are actually more practical for tenants who intend to reduce their corporate environmental impacts, whereas they do not have control over whole building design and operations. This article highlights the importance of green interior retrofitting and provides guidance.
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Goulart, Jefferson O., Eliana T. Terci, and Estevam V. Otero. "A dinâmica urbana de cidades médias do interior paulista sob o Estatuto da Cidade." Revista Brasileira de Estudos Urbanos e Regionais 15, no. 1 (May 31, 2013): 183. http://dx.doi.org/10.22296/2317-1529.2013v15n1p183.

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O artigo examina o alcance do Estatuto da Cidade como novo marco regulatório da política urbana brasileira a partir de estudo comparativo de processos contemporâneos em três cidades médias do interior paulista (Piracicaba, Bauru e Rio Claro). O estudo se faz mediante a análise de três dimensões complementares: econômica, urbanística e político-institucional. São constatados obstáculos endógenos e exógenos que têm condicionado as políticas urbanas e dificultado a aplicação dos indicativos dos Planos Diretores recém-aprovados. Apesar da expressiva incorporação formal dos instrumentos do Estatuto da Cidade, boa parte não tem sido implantada ou não foi regulamentada, cenário que pode ser generalizado como predominante no país e que remete aos padrões contemporâneos do desenvolvimento regional e urbano. Palavras-chave: dinâmica urbana; cidades médias; Estatuto da Cidade; planos diretores participativos. Abstract: The paper examines the scope of the Statute of the City as a new regulation act of Brazilian urban policy based on the comparative study of contemporary processes in three medium-sized cities in São Paulo State (Piracicaba, Bauru and Rio Claro). The study analyzes three complementary dimensions: economic, urban and political-institutional. It observes the existence of endogenous and exogenous obstacles, which have been conditioning urban policies and hindering the implementation of the directives of newly approved Master Plans. Despite the expressive incorporation of instruments of the Statute of the City, many of them has neither been implemented nor regulated. That scenario can be generalized as prevalent in Brazil and refers to contemporary standards of regional and urban development. Keyword: urban dynamics; medium-sized cities; statute of the city; participative master plans.
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Lessard, Jean-Philippe, and Christopher M. Buddle. "The effects of urbanization on ant assemblages (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) associated with the Molson Nature Reserve, Quebec." Canadian Entomologist 137, no. 2 (April 2005): 215–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.4039/n04-055.

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AbstractUrbanization causes the fragmentation of natural habitats into isolated patches surrounded by anthropogenic habitats. Fragment size and the intensity of human disturbance have been shown to affect both composition and diversity of arthropod communities, but most groups have been understudied. We investigated effects of urbanization on ant assemblages (Hymenoptera: Formicidae) in and around the Molson Reserve, a preserved maple-beech forest surrounded by residential properties near Montréal, Quebec. We studied how local ant assemblages differed in terms of composition, abundance, and species richness, depending on whether they were situated in the interior forest, in adjacent residential backyards, or at the edge between these two habitats. We also compared an intact forest interior with a younger and moderately disturbed forest (“buffer zone”) between the urban matrix and the interior forest. Few differences were detected between the buffer zone and the intact forest interior. Extrapolated estimates of species richness suggest that it is lowest in the forest interior and highest in urban zones. Community composition, as investigated with ordination analysis, revealed a clear difference between the fauna of urban sites and the fauna of edges and forest interiors, and analyzing the relative abundance of ants showed residential backyards to contain the most ants. Urban assemblages were characterized by several competitively dominant species, including one introduced or “tramp” species. The occurrence of aggressive and dominant species in urban sites and at the edges of the Molson Reserve could potentially interfere with the dispersal and immigration of ground-dwelling arthropods and negatively affect local diversity or community composition in isolated forest reserves in urban centres.
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Atmodiwirjo, Paramita, and Yandi Andri Yatmo. "Urban Interiority: Emerging Cultural and Spatial Practices." Interiority 4, no. 1 (January 29, 2021): 1–4. http://dx.doi.org/10.7454/in.v4i1.131.

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Discourses on the urban interior recently have emerged as a series of provocations and experimentations that highlight the critical understanding of the urban realm from the interiority perspective. In the fast-moving development of modern global cities, the urban interior concept becomes increasingly important. Cities are fast becoming containers for contemporary spatial practice, with urban spaces becoming melting pots of diverse cultures and communities. Viewing urban settings from the interiority perspective allows us to comprehend unique local characters in particular contexts. This issue of Interiority presents a collection of works that illustrate the expanded understanding of the urban interior, especially in relation to cultural and spatial practice in urban contexts. This issue presents multiple perspectives on understanding the urban interior, raising arguments on how its spatial condition could perform as a container of cultural practice, while simultaneously offering possibilities on manoeuvring within the urban interior context through various ways of reading, interpretation and intervention. These perspectives and approaches promise further possibilities to expand our interior architectural practice in responding not only to current contemporary practice, but also to the future of urban inhabitation.
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Hayes, Richard W. "The Aesthetic Interior as Incubator of Health and Well-Being." Architectural History 60 (2017): 277–301. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/arh.2017.9.

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ABSTRACTDomestic interiors created during the Aesthetic Movement have often been interpreted in terms of the ideas of aesthetic autonomy associated with Théophile Gautier, Walter Pater and Joris-Karl Huysmans. This essay takes a different tack by analysing the aesthetic interior in light of concerns with health reform. It focuses on the writings and designs of architect E.W. Godwin (1833–86) who pursued interior design as part of an effort to foster a healthy life, one that consisted of hygiene, relief from urban stress, and an enlargement of the aesthetic responsiveness of his clients. He conceived of spare and calm interiors that were healthful alternatives to dust-infested Victorian clutter while concomitantly offering psychological respite from the ‘high-pressure, nervous times’ endemic to metropolitan life. This goal accords with Godwin's related interest in dress reform, a preoccupation that led to his participation in the Health Exhibition of 1884. By unpacking Godwin's specific contribution to the sanitary discussions that prevailed in Victorian Britain, I align the aesthetic interior with the central imperative of sanitary reform: promoting health through ameliorating Britain's urban environment.
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Feliz Arrizabalaga, Nerea. "Urban Interiority in the Anthropocene." Interiority 3, no. 1 (January 24, 2020): 83–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.7454/in.v3i1.74.

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This paper explores how interior design could amplify the current discourse on sustainability within urban public space. The consideration of a number of contemporary authors that are questioning the traditional notion of interiority situates this paper within an expansive understanding of interiority in the context of the Anthropocene. Interiority is considered as a transferable condition based on modes of interior occupation, that can take place on the outdoors, and is often found in public spaces within dense urban areas. In the face of an upcoming biodiversity crisis, this text advocates for a necessary disciplinary shift away from traditional anthropocentric views, towards a multispecies conception of the built environment. Both the ideas and the case studies in this article seek to expand the role of interior elements, both semiotics and performance, to foster inclusivity of non-human species, in particular insects, in city environments. Two design proposals illustrate how interior design tactics might positively contribute to raising awareness about this underacknowledged population, and at the same time, help cultivate a sense of intimacy between us and the multiple life forms that inhabit our public urban spaces.
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Watkins, Holly. "Schoenberg's Interior Designs." Journal of the American Musicological Society 61, no. 1 (2008): 123–206. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jams.2008.61.1.123.

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Abstract Familiar accounts of fin-de-siècle Vienna tend to view Arnold Schoenberg's atonal works and Adolf Loos's anti-ornamental polemics as expressions of similar modernist principles. But although the two friends were equally determined to challenge bourgeois standards of beauty, the calm appearance of Loos's buildings, whose denuded facades shielded plush yet refined interiors, is hard to reconcile with Schoenberg's radically dissonant and expressive music circa 1910. This divergence can be understood in terms of contrasting responses to urban modernity. While Loos's architecture facilitated a retreat inward, Schoenberg's release of unconscious impulses into the compositional process mimicked the psychological breakdown Georg Simmel believed to threaten city dwellers—a breakdown in which inner and outer realms were no longer distinguishable. Situating Schoenberg's music in relation to the problem of interiority in modern metropolitan life, I argue that the composer's creative aesthetics began to converge with those of Loos only later in his career. By incorporating concealment into the very fabric of twelve-tone music, Schoenberg took an “inward turn” resembling Loos's architectural efforts to protect subjectivity from needless exposure. The increasing emphasis on multidimensionality in Schoenberg's discussions of twelve-tone musical space also betrays the influence of Loos's innovations in interior space planning in the 1920s and 1930s. Harnessing the psychological and sociological aims of Loos's designs as tools of interpretation, I propose that the twelve-tone method represents a renewed commitment to privacy and interiority in the face of the externalizing impulses of urban modernity.
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Patel, Tulsi N. "THE RELATION OF INTERIOR SPACES WITH URBAN CONTEXT." International Journal of Research -GRANTHAALAYAH 6, no. 2 (February 28, 2018): 162–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.29121/granthaalayah.v6.i2.2018.1559.

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Space, it is the area provided for particular purpose. Space can be two dimensional, three dimensional or multi. The perception of a space is known by its functionality and quality. Space does not define the use or behavior. Space can be identified as interior, exterior, common, transition; public, personal etc. 90 percent of our daily lives are spent inside. That is our experience of the city – moving from one interior to another. So our remit is to improve the quality of life for citizen, focusing on the quality of interior spaces.
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Khokhrin, Eugeniy V., and Sergеi A. Smolkov. "Urban interior. General characteristics of methods and approaches." Journal «Izvestiya vuzov. Investitsiyi. Stroyitelstvo. Nedvizhimost» 9, no. 1 (2019): 214–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.21285/2227-2917-2019-1-214-231.

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KERKIN, KATE. "URBAN DESIGN OR INTERIOR DECORATION IN THE RAIN?" Australian Planner 35, no. 3 (January 1998): 133–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07293682.1998.9657834.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Urban interior"

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Fong, Kwok-wai. "Redevelopment of Porto Interior, Macau." Hong Kong : University of Hong Kong, 1994. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record.jsp?B25945002.

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Tessari, Leandro Marcos [UNESP]. "Processo de expansão urbana e conurbação em uma aglomeração urbana não-metropolitana no interior paulista." Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/11449/95657.

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Made available in DSpace on 2014-06-11T19:27:51Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 0 Previous issue date: 2009-10-23Bitstream added on 2014-06-13T18:32:05Z : No. of bitstreams: 1 tessari_lm_me_rcla.pdf: 2300652 bytes, checksum: 3d573a7852b834abd65426990b70d199 (MD5)
Secretaria Estadual de Educação do Estado de São Paulo
A presente pesquisa analisa e compreende a formação do processo de conurbação em uma aglomeração não-metropolitana no interior paulista, tendo como estudo de caso, as cidades de Araraquara e Américo Brasiliense. O processo de concentração populacional e ação dos diversos agentes produtores do espaço urbano propiciaram a expansão dos tecidos urbanos, favorecendo o processo de conurbação. Para a execução dessa pesquisa foi necessário: levantamento bibliográfico a respeito dos temas propostos, em especial o da conurbação, em periódicos, livros, anais de congressos e outros; levantamento de campo (entrevistas e levantamento cartográfico); coleta de dados estatísticos em fontes oficiais de dados como o IBGE, a Fundação SEADE e as prefeituras das cidades acima citadas. O processo de conurbação teve início a partir da década de 1990, resultado de uma somatória de fenômenos produzidos em décadas anteriores, em especial excessivos números de lotes em Araraquara, produzindo vazios urbanos e canalizando parte da população para Américo Brasiliense em busca de lotes mais acessíveis devido à valorização dessas áreas.
This research intends to analyze and understand the conurbation process Araraquara and Américo Brasiliense towns, a non-metropolitan in the interior of Sao Paulo state. The process of population concentration and action of various urban space developers favored the expansion of urban fabrics, promoting the conurbation process. For the realization of this research it was necessary the following: bibliographic survey on preferable themes, especially that of conurbation; field survey including interviws and cartographic survey; static data collection instituional agencies such as IBGE, SEADE and the above quoted local governments. The process of the conurbation had begun in the 1990 decade, as a result of a set of phenomena in former decades, especially the excessive numbers of allotments in Araraquara, producing idle urban spaces and canalizing part of population to Américo Brasiliense, in search of affordable plots of land due to the valorization of those areas.
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Tessari, Leandro Marcos. "Processo de expansão urbana e conurbação em uma aglomeração urbana não-metropolitana no interior paulista /." Rio Claro : [s.n.], 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/11449/95657.

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Orientador: Roberto Braga
Banca: Pompeu Figueiredo de Carvalho
Banca: José Francisco
Resumo: A presente pesquisa analisa e compreende a formação do processo de conurbação em uma aglomeração não-metropolitana no interior paulista, tendo como estudo de caso, as cidades de Araraquara e Américo Brasiliense. O processo de concentração populacional e ação dos diversos agentes produtores do espaço urbano propiciaram a expansão dos tecidos urbanos, favorecendo o processo de conurbação. Para a execução dessa pesquisa foi necessário: levantamento bibliográfico a respeito dos temas propostos, em especial o da conurbação, em periódicos, livros, anais de congressos e outros; levantamento de campo (entrevistas e levantamento cartográfico); coleta de dados estatísticos em fontes oficiais de dados como o IBGE, a Fundação SEADE e as prefeituras das cidades acima citadas. O processo de conurbação teve início a partir da década de 1990, resultado de uma somatória de fenômenos produzidos em décadas anteriores, em especial excessivos números de lotes em Araraquara, produzindo vazios urbanos e canalizando parte da população para Américo Brasiliense em busca de lotes mais acessíveis devido à valorização dessas áreas.
Abstract: This research intends to analyze and understand the conurbation process Araraquara and Américo Brasiliense towns, a non-metropolitan in the interior of Sao Paulo state. The process of population concentration and action of various urban space developers favored the expansion of urban fabrics, promoting the conurbation process. For the realization of this research it was necessary the following: bibliographic survey on preferable themes, especially that of conurbation; field survey including interviws and cartographic survey; static data collection instituional agencies such as IBGE, SEADE and the above quoted local governments. The process of the conurbation had begun in the 1990 decade, as a result of a set of phenomena in former decades, especially the excessive numbers of allotments in Araraquara, producing idle urban spaces and canalizing part of population to Américo Brasiliense, in search of affordable plots of land due to the valorization of those areas.
Mestre
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Overby, Heather A. "Scan & Scansion: An Urban Residency for Poets & Artists Working in Collaboration." VCU Scholars Compass, 2018. https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/5374.

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Scansion is the act of discerning a poem’s meter and measure to discover its overall meaning. To achieve beauty in poetry, just as in interior design, content must continually be in conversation with form. And, just as a building must be scaled against the human figure to determine its final shape, a poem is scaled against human breath, the breadth of our sounds. Scan & Scansion is a Richmond-based residency with a six-month term providing a work, living and exhibition space to poets and artists who wish to work collaboratively across disciplines. As the program is essentially about applied poetics and process, it presents the perfect moment to place these two modes of measurement alongside one another, exploring how poetics may be used as a design driver--how a space might be both architectural and lyrical, and, ultimately, how poetry and the arts, or the sound and the image, may enrich each other.
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Mahindroo, Amrita. "Edens islands rooms : the project of the urban interior." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/65742.

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Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 2011.
Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 138-141).
The privately owned public interior, defined here as an enclosed urban space owned by a private entity, has been a recurrent character of many 20th century liberal cities. It has today found an epitome in the mega-structural urban enclaves of the developing world. The thesis seeks to challenge the idea of future within these forms. Developed as technologically deterministic, aesthetic totalities for a precise public in their present, they do little to anticipate the potential publics they may have to absorb as and when the fleeting conditions, which necessitate these forms have subsided into history. Herein, they reveal the comic tragedy of instating architecture with the design of the city, that most desired scope of work. The city, which by its liberal democratic definition is a creator of possibility, is thus reduced to a handful of variables in light of architecture's hegemony, and points once again to a recurrent disciplinary malaise for death by total design. This totality comes all too clearly at the expense of excluding a generous swath of a present and future public and the potential it offers. Whilst the radical manifesto has become a thing of the past, the best means of contemporary attack is elective participation. By this I mean to acknowledge one's constraints within the market, and to deliberate over the potential agency of architecture through more operative means. Herein, a self-conscious sense of humor about the discipline's megalomania is paired with the sincere ideals for creating urban possibilities through architectural form within the structure of neo-liberal economics. This coupling is explored through the design of an enclave for financial services in Mumbai, India. As the breadth of what constitutes the Indian middle class encroaches monumentality, the possibilities for an inclusive, privately owned public interior are interrogated through a manifesto for its ideal spatial tool, the room. A product of both architecture and urbanism, the room mediates between both disciplines by standing as a definitive form through its enclavic walls and simultaneously creating urban possibility in its void.
by Amrita Mahindroo.
S.M.
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Grobler, Anika. "The relation between spatial definition and place-making architectural and urban interiors /." Pretoria : [s.n.], 2005. http://upetd.up.ac.za/thesis/available/etd-04112007-172158.

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Fong, Kwok-wai, and 方國偉. "Redevelopment of Porto Interior, Macau." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 1994. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B31981987.

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Rozewski, Richard. "THE WALLS WE PUT UP - LONELINESS AND BELONGING IN URBAN CO-LIVING." VCU Scholars Compass, 2019. https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/5871.

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ABSTRACT Concurrent issues of social isolation and loneliness have long been recognized as problems that affect seniors but it is also being proven to affect young people as well, specifically with the rise of new technologies and a perception of connectedness. Co-living provides one alternative design solution to traditional housing models which can unlock a range of social benefits. MOTIVATION Loneliness is an unfortunate reality of modern life and it is something that most people experience at least once in their life (Cacioppo & Patrick, 2008). A study carried out by Berguno, Leroux McAinsh, Shaikh (2004), showed that 80% of young people and over 40% of adults over the age of 65 experienced loneliness in the course of life. Good housing plays an important role in building community and strengthening social interaction and bonding. Co-living is a residential structure that accommodates three or more biologically unrelated people (Bothell, 2015; Tummers, 2015). It is commonly contained within a single dwelling, sub-divided into a combination of public and private spaces (Scott-Hanson & Scott-Hanson, 2005). Co-housing, community living, or co-living in particular may be one possible solution for the endemic loneliness and social isolation challenges that we face. PROBLEM In many American cities, traditional housing forms are not meeting those needs and as our population increases, it is crucial to find replicable and sustainable methods of creating an inclusive urban fabric that meets the social and physical needs of all inhabitants (Darling, 2017). It is increasingly clear that there is a lack of understanding of the realities of co-living spaces and that this limits the application of the co-living model. While co-housing has traditionally been established in rural or suburban contexts, there are benefits to urban co-living (Kim, 2017). To experience the full ecological, economical and most importantly social benefits of urban co-living, research must be performed to understand how residents share, experience, and inhabit space. METHODS This project will respond by applying design thinking, a human centered design approach, and collaborative exploration methods to produce case studies for an urban co-living development in the US. Workshops, observations, literature reviews, and interviews will build a foundation of contemporary knowledge. Key themes identified in the literature on social isolation and loneliness will be used to inform a discussion on the potential for housing to help alleviate these problems. There will also be a rigorous case study analysis of recent precedents emerging in the field of collective housing. PRELIMINARY RESULTS The design of a flexible living space that explores isolation and connection at the scale of the individual and the collective in an existing building is an overarching goal of the design. It offers future users and designers the opportunity to learn and experiment towards a better understanding of how residents use space as well as examining loneliness and isolation as it relates to a design solution. CONCLUSION The success of the project, and its theoretical outcome, will show the role design can play in contemporary research, positive change, and sustainable development. The result will have implications for co-living providers, researchers, and designers supporting sustainable lifestyle alternatives.
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Jones, Cilvia. "Hotel + Urban Community Interwoven." VCU Scholars Compass, 2009. http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/1780.

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Infusion is a gallery hotel that seeks to promote and encourage interaction between the local people of the community and traveling guests. More than just a hotel for rest and relaxation, Infusion will display a public gallery making art the universal language for their guests and the locals.
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Mohammed, Anisa A. "Urban Farm." VCU Scholars Compass, 2007. http://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd_retro/154.

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According to Michael Pollan's article in Mother Jones Magazine, "The typical fruit or vegetable on an American's plate travels some 1,500 miles to get there, and is frequently better traveled and more worldly than its eater" (Pollan 38). The majority of citizens living in or near metropolitan centers rarely come in contact with produce pre-barcode; that is, produce still connected to the earth or not yet processed for mass distribution and consumption. This is especially the case in urban settings where land is at a premium and is valued more for residential and commercial purposes than for food production. In the case of U.S. cities, though we produce sufficiently to feed our population, the majority of produce consumed is grown outside of state lines if not entirely outside of the country. "In 2004, the U.S. exported nearly $20 million worth of lettuce - over 3/4 of it grown in California - to Mexico. The same year, it imported $20 million worth of Mexican lettuce" (Pollan 43). It is far more likely that urbanites seek references from their car mechanics and tailors than from producers of the food they consume. Locally grown and consumed food has several quality-of-life enhancing attributes, most importantly providing fresher, more nutritious produce with a known history, increased self-sufficiency with respect to food, and reduced environmental impact caused by reduced inter and intra-national transportation.
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Books on the topic "Urban interior"

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Urban interior: Informal explorations, interventions and occupations. Baunach: Spurbuchverlag, 2011.

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Urban houses. Barcelona, Spain: Charles Broto, 2003.

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Shaun, Sullivan, ed. Gardenhome--city: Creating an urban haven. San Francisco, Calif: Chronicle, 2002.

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The modern American urban novel: Nature as "interior structure". Detroit: Wayne State University Press, 1991.

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Navarro, Isabel Yeste. La reforma interior: Urbanismo zaragozano contemporáneo. Zaragoza: Institución Fernando el Católico, 1998.

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Francisco, Asensio Cerver, ed. Small urban interiors: 500 solutions for living. New York, NY: Universe, 2002.

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Johnson, Craig W. Urban & community forestry: A guide for the interior western United States. Ogden, Utah: USDA Forest Service, Intermountain Region, 1990.

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Johnson, Craig W. Urban & community forestry: A guide for the interior western United States. Ogden, Utah: USDA Forest Service, Intermountain Region, 1990.

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Johnson, Craig W. Urban & community forestry: A guide for the interior western United States. Ogden, Utah: USDA Forest Service, Intermountain Region, 1990.

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Johnson, Craig W. Urban & community forestry: A guide for the interior western United States. Ogden, Utah: USDA Forest Service, Intermountain Region, 1990.

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Book chapters on the topic "Urban interior"

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Moor, Terry M. "The South: Coastal Plains and Interior Uplands." In Reinventing an Urban Vernacular, 91–124. New York, NY : Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315545097-5.

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Abbas, Ackbar. "Asian Phantasmagorias of the Interior." In The Palgrave Encyclopedia of Urban Literary Studies, 1–4. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-62592-8_62-1.

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Vinha G. Silva, Maria Manuela, Marina Cabral Pinto, Pedro Alexandre Dinis, and Lucas Mandavela. "Geochemistry of Urban Soil in the Fast-Growing Kuito City (Angola)." In Petrogenesis and Exploration of the Earth’s Interior, 133–35. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-01575-6_32.

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Demers, Claude M. H., and André Potvin. "Interior-Exterior Ambiances: Environmental Transitions in the Recollection of an Urban Stroll." In Experiential Walks for Urban Design, 243–57. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-76694-8_14.

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Mehnert, K., and P. Kutz. "Urban Interior for E-Car Sharing in a Digital World." In Mobilität und digitale Transformation, 69–83. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-20779-3_5.

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Broderick, Catherine. "Cities of Her Own Invention: Urban Iconology in Cities of the Interior." In Anaïs Nin Literary Perspectives, 33–51. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-25505-4_3.

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Conley, Tanja D. "Introduction." In Urban Architectures in Interwar Yugoslavia, 1–14. New York : Routledge, 2020. | Series: Routledge research in architectural history: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429401640-1.

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Conley, Tanja D. "Conclusion." In Urban Architectures in Interwar Yugoslavia, 205–17. New York : Routledge, 2020. | Series: Routledge research in architectural history: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429401640-10.

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Conley, Tanja D. "De-Ottomanized Belgrade." In Urban Architectures in Interwar Yugoslavia, 17–40. New York : Routledge, 2020. | Series: Routledge research in architectural history: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429401640-3.

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Conley, Tanja D. "Croationed Zagreb." In Urban Architectures in Interwar Yugoslavia, 41–64. New York : Routledge, 2020. | Series: Routledge research in architectural history: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429401640-4.

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Conference papers on the topic "Urban interior"

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Kim, Myungshig. "Urban Interior as a Theoretical Question." In Annual International Conference on Architecture and Civil Engineering. Global Science & Technology Forum (GSTF), 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.5176/2301-394x_ace13.68.

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Kim, Myungshig. "The Campidoglio: An Urban Interior from the Untidy Place." In Annual International Conference on Architecture and Civil Engineering (ACE 2014). Global Science and Technology Forum, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.5176/2301-394x_ace14.27.

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Fang, Xiao. "Application of Computer Aided Design Software in Interior Design." In 2021 2nd International Conference on Urban Engineering and Management Science (ICUEMS). IEEE, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icuems52408.2021.00045.

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Feliz, Nerea. "Restless Space, a Consumable Interior." In 2016 ACSA International Conference. ACSA Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.intlp.2016.3.

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Populating the urban fabric of the host environment with myriad objects for sale, the street market produces a brief, exuberant and perishable system of interior spaces. While the market is taking place, the semiotics of the domestic unexpectedly disguise the city’s streets. With a fluctuating number of vendors and an oscillating volume of merchandise, street markets defy prescribed architectural boundaries, raising dilemmas about flexibility and design control when using standard architectural components to provide permanence. Although nominally outdoors, what street markets thrive on is a captivating kind of interiority, a mutable medium, characterized by cycles of change. Rather than following architectural typologies, the design of permanent market stalls might profitably turn its focus to models of interior occupation.
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Chen, Jing, and Neng Zhu. "Study on VOC Emissions from Cement Floor Paint for Interior Use in the Small Environmental Chamber." In International Conference On Civil Engineering And Urban Planning 2012. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784412435.119.

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Zhu Jun. "Research of modern urban residential interior design based on low-carbon concept." In 3rd International Conference on Contemporary Problems in Architecture and Construction. IET, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1049/cp.2011.1298.

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Lagunas, Eva, Moeness G. Amin, Fauzia Ahmad, and Montse Nájar. "Improved interior wall detection using designated dictionaries in compressive urban sensing problems." In SPIE Defense, Security, and Sensing, edited by Fauzia Ahmad. SPIE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2015410.

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Tehve, Karin I. "An Intersectional Analysis of Urban Public Interiors." In 2018 ACSA International Conference. ACSA Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.intl.2018.42.

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This paper proposes an analysis of New York City’s Interior Privately owned Public Spaces (INT POPS) and the quality of public space they generate. Intersectionality here is a methodology to examine key attributes of INT POPS simultaneously. This method offers opportunities to question prevailing typologies of the term public that are oppositional in nature; this opposition serves to occlude the mutually dependent nature of the types. INT POPS are vaguely programmed, bounded, enclosed and enable proximity, and generate a social space recognizable as an essential characteristic of urban life: a visible aggregation of individuals prior to definition as a collective. Without a simultaneous examination of the physical spaces themselves and the rules, laws and codes that govern them these spaces a false image of a universally accessible space is produced.
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Tapia, Yolanda María, Adolfo Vigil-de-Insausti, and María Dolores Montaño. "The urban form in the city of Tulcán, Carchi - Ecuador." In 24th ISUF 2017 - City and Territory in the Globalization Age. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/isuf2017.2017.6268.

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Yolanda Tapia¹, Adolfo Vigil de Insausti¹, María Dolores Montaño ² ¹ Escuela Técnica Superior de Arquitectura de Valencia, UPV. Camino de Vera, s/n. 46022 Valencia, ²Pontificia Universidad Católica del Ecuador, PUCE. Av. 12 de Octubre 1076, Vicente Ramón Roca, Quito, Ecuador E-mail: yoly.tapiamora@gmail.com, advide@urb.upv.es, mdmontano@puce.edu.ec Keywords: Tulcán, Ecuador, urban, landscape, history Conference topics and scale: The Urban Form, “City and territory in the globalization age” Tulcán, located north in Ecuador is the capital of the province of Carchi. It is a city especially commercial and agricultural whose urban morphology responds to historical, environmental and administrative circumstances, that is how, since 1851, the date on which the “cantonization” takes place begins the formation of the capital city with an urban structure formed in checkerboard that welcomes the traditional nucleus of the typical city of the ecuatorian highlands. With the development of this city, isolated neighborhoods are born out of the original urban fabric that expand in the territory, following the main road connections, eventually to fill the internal space with a morphology of contrasts, as each neighborhood or new occupations are structured individually without thinking of a city of integral formation. The longitudinal growth of the city was marked from its beginning by the river Bobo to the north-west and the river Tajamar to the south-east that keep the city within natural limits, which also provide certain environmental and landscape benefits, however in the the last few decades the city has had a significant growth that threatens an unattended and constantly expanding periphery to these environmental resources. We are facing a heterogeneous city, with problems and possibilities and attending to the idea that the city is an unfinished work, integral and sustainable urban regeneration is the basis for a reordering and a new urban approach. It is therefore proposed to study three strategic lines: the existing city, its internal circuits of connection and the adjacent nature. Establishing initial uses in the city, to occupy the predominant urban void and thus to activate the pubic space. Restructure mobility, which will strengthen the use of new peripheral road infrastructures to reduce motorized circuits in the interior, thus promoting the use of bicycles and the creation of pedestrian routes. Finally, environmental resources will again have the value of landscape and ecological wealth producing around the city a green infrastructure that contains growth and is the link of this with the countryside. References Beery, B. (1975) ‘Consecuencias humanas de la urbanización’, Madrid: Pirámide Hernández, A. (2001) ‘La ciudad estructurada’, en Boletín CF+S 15 Calidad de vida urbana: variedad, cohesión y medio ambiente. (http://habitat.aq.upm.es/boletin/n15/aaher.html) Huertas Nadal, D. (2012) ‘I making Heterotopías, laboratorio de estrategias urbanas’, Vitoria: Universidad Francisco Vitoria Lopez de Lucio, R. (2007) ‘Construir ciudad en la periferia’, Madrid: ETS Arquitectura (UPM) Urbanística y ordenación del territorio Solá-Morales, M. (1997) ‘Las formas del crecimiento urbano’, Barcelona:Universitat Politécnica de Catalunya
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Kale, Manjil, Rajat Diwan, Fnu Renganathan Dinesh, Mark Benton, Prasanth Muralidharan, Paul Venhovens, Johnell Brooks, ChunKai Liu, Julie Jacobs, and Craig Payne. "Conceptual Development and Implementation of a Reconfigurable Interior Concept for an Urban Utility/Activity Vehicle." In SAE 2016 World Congress and Exhibition. 400 Commonwealth Drive, Warrendale, PA, United States: SAE International, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.4271/2016-01-0321.

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Reports on the topic "Urban interior"

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Neuscamman, Stephanie J. Goldstar 2016 Interim Report: Brief Introduction to Urban Dispersion. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), May 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1409943.

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