Academic literature on the topic 'Wainwright Building'

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Journal articles on the topic "Wainwright Building"

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Lupkin, Paula. "The Wainwright Building:." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 77, no. 4 (December 1, 2018): 428–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jsah.2018.77.4.428.

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Louis Sullivan's Wainwright Building has long occupied a central place in the history of modern architecture. In The Wainwright Building: Monument of St. Louis's Lager Landscape, Paula Lupkin reexamines the canonical “first skyscraper” as a different type of monument: the symbolic center of St. Louis's “lager landscape.” Viewed through the lenses of patronage and local history, this ten-story structure emerges as the white-collar hub of one of the city's most important cultural and economic forces: brewing. Home to the city's brewery architects and contractors, a brewing consortium, and related real estate and insurance companies, the building, as Ellis Wainwright conceived it, served as the downtown headquarters of the brewing industry. Echoing the brewery stock house as well as cold storage structures and ornamented with motifs of lager's most expensive ingredient, hops, the building's design incorporated both the natural and technological elements of brewing. Analyzing the Wainwright Building as part of a lager landscape adds new dimension and significance to Sullivan's masterpiece.
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Wainwright, Bethli, Marilyn J. Waring, Shirley Julich, Polly Yeung, and Jenny K. Green. "Quality of life of living with a transplanted liver :The issue of returning to normalcy." Aotearoa New Zealand Social Work 30, no. 1 (April 3, 2018): 7–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.11157/anzswj-vol30iss1id428.

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INTRODUCTION: Advanced technology in medical and pharmacology has increased surgical survival rates for transplant recipients. Therefore, post-transplant care is critical and tightly connected with key focuses on the recipient’s quality of life (QOL). Post-transplant QOL is multifaceted, encompassing morbidity and personal, social, familial and environmental support for recipients. Post-liver transplantation recovery extends well beyond returning home.METHOD: Building on Wainwright’s research (Wainwright, 2011a, 2011b; Wainwright, Jülich, Waring, Yeung, Green, 2016), herself a liver transplant recipient, this article reports transplant recipients’ perceptions and experiences after the first three years and discusses how they re-established function in everyday life as they adapted to their new normal to achieve QOL. The research employed interpretive description to interview transcripts and field-notes of 17 liver transplant recipients. Data were evaluated according to inductive thematic analysis. Eschewing the health-related QOL measure for its rigidity and lack of qualitative data, this research captured the lived experiences of liver transplant recipients unlike clinically focused studies.FINDINGS: The results showed that, although transplantation can make positive changes in their lives, recipients continued to be influenced subtly by illness which can alter their re-conceptualisation and re-definition of QOL and normalcy. The success of a liver transplant does not depend only on the physical care given; to the recipients as the spectre of future ill health and transplant failure continue to be perceived as a constant risks. Ongoing support from family, friends, and healthcare professionals are none-the-less fundamental in the post-transplantation journey.
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Siry, Joseph. "Adler and Sullivan's Guaranty Building in Buffalo." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 55, no. 1 (March 1, 1996): 6–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/991053.

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As the last of Adler and Sullivan's tall steel office buildings, the Guaranty responds in form and ornament not only to Sullivan's aesthetic program, but also to functional and constructive demands of the type articulated by Adler and others, and to an urban context of monumental architecture in Buffalo's civic center. The Guaranty's spatial and structural planning were based on a unit system of design, which also underlay the proportions of its street elevations and fenestration. The Guaranty was related to Adler and Sullivan's earlier Wainwright Building, whose fronts may reflect concern for conveying structural stability in light of concurrent debates on high buildings. Use of terra-cotta rather than brick in buildings like the Guaranty was prompted in part by labor conditions. The accentuated verticality of the elevations, which exemplifies ideas expressed in Sullivan's essay "The Tall Office Building Artistically Considered," also recalls the theory of Hippolyte Taine (1828-1893), professor of aesthetics and history of art at the Ecole des Beaux Arts, whose ideas Sullivan had studied.
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Wainwright, Faith. "President's Inaugural Address: Working together for a creative and collaborative future." Structural Engineer 96, no. 2 (February 1, 2023): 12–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.56330/xufa9222.

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Wainwright, Faith. "President's end-of-year report: Preparing for the future of tomorrow – today." Structural Engineer 97, no. 1 (January 1, 2019): 6–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.56330/zjsc5078.

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Wainwright, G. J. "Saving the Rose." Antiquity 63, no. 240 (September 1989): 430–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0003598x00076407.

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Geoffrey Wainwright, as the senior archaeologist within English Heritage, has been at the centre of the decisions and debates over the future of the Rose Theatre site. He sets out here his view of the issues, and explains why English Heritage adopted a policy of enclosing the site within an open basement of a new office building; thus ensuring its preservation and securing the option of future presentation to the public.
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Wainwright, Faith. "President's mid-year report." Structural Engineer 96, no. 8 (August 1, 2018): 6–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.56330/kusk7294.

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President Faith Wainwright reports on her first six months in office, highlighting three principal themes: engagement with UN Sustainable Development Goals, the importance of sharing knowledge within our professional communities, and the various forms that 'leadership' can take within the profession.
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Halliday, Sallyann. "Television representations and professional femininities: The case of the UK police." Northern Lights: Film & Media Studies Yearbook 20, no. 1 (June 1, 2022): 67–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1386/nl_00032_1.

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This article explores female occupational identity construction by looking at the issue of media representations of women’s police work in the United Kingdom. The example, television representation, discussed here, is the character of Sergeant Catherine Cawood in Happy Valley, a UK police drama written by a UK-based playwright, Sally Wainwright. As the lead character in Happy Valley, Sergeant Catherine Cawood’s on-screen portrayal will be the focus of the discussion in this article. Building on findings from previous research undertaken by the author, which explored how gendered identities of women police professionals are represented in the media, this article argues that television representations of UK female police work portray a particular form of professional femininity, one which I argue is still highly ‘gendered’, mainly because such representation of women’s police work relies on narratives centred on the effective and competent use of ‘emotional labour’.
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Liew, Min, Ming Xiao, Louise Farquharson, Dmitry Nicolsky, Anne Jensen, Vladimir Romanovsky, Jana Peirce, et al. "Understanding Effects of Permafrost Degradation and Coastal Erosion on Civil Infrastructure in Arctic Coastal Villages: A Community Survey and Knowledge Co-Production." Journal of Marine Science and Engineering 10, no. 3 (March 15, 2022): 422. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jmse10030422.

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This paper presents the results of a community survey that was designed to better understand the effects of permafrost degradation and coastal erosion on civil infrastructure. Observations were collected from residents in four Arctic coastal communities: Point Lay, Wainwright, Utqiaġvik, and Kaktovik. All four communities are underlain by continuous ice-rich permafrost with varying degrees of degradation and coastal erosion. The types, locations, and periods of observed permafrost thaw and coastal erosion were elicited. Survey participants also reported the types of civil infrastructure being affected by permafrost degradation and coastal erosion and any damage to residential buildings. Most survey participants reported that coastal erosion has been occurring for a longer period than permafrost thaw. Surface water ponding, ground surface collapse, and differential ground settlement are the three types of changes in ground surface manifested by permafrost degradation that are most frequently reported by the participants, while houses are reported as the most affected type of infrastructure in the Arctic coastal communities. Wall cracking and house tilting are the most commonly reported types of residential building damage. The effects of permafrost degradation and coastal erosion on civil infrastructure vary between communities. Locations of observed permafrost degradation and coastal erosion collected from all survey participants in each community were stacked using heatmap data visualization. The heatmaps constructed using the community survey data are reasonably consistent with modeled data synthesized from the scientific literature. This study shows a useful approach to coproduce knowledge with Arctic residents to identify locations of permafrost thaw and coastal erosion at higher spatial resolution as well as the types of infrastructure damage of most concern to Arctic residents.
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Wood, Antony. "Pavements in the sky: the skybridge in tall buildings." Architectural Research Quarterly 7, no. 3-4 (September 2003): 325–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1359135503002264.

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Since the World Trade Center Towers collapsed in full view of the watching world (FEMA, 2002), the improved safety of tall buildings has become of prime importance globally (Pearson, 2001). International groups such as the UK-based ‘Safety in Tall Buildings Working Group’ (Roberts, 2002), and Arups High Rise (Wainwright, 2002) which are considering these safety implications have made recommendations for improvement in three general areas: structural systems, especially with respect to progressive collapsefire proofing, to structure and fabricevacuation systems, concentrating specifically on vertical evacuation systems such as elevators and stairs.
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Books on the topic "Wainwright Building"

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Balihar, Lisa. Louis Henry Sullivan und das Wainwright Building. GRIN Verlag GmbH, 2013.

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