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Détails d'architecture / Martin Mittag
Titre : Détails d'architecture : Répertoire de solutions d'utilite pratique pour la construction Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Martin Mittag, Auteur ; Deutsche Bauzeitschrift, Auteur Editeur : Paris : Eyrolles Année de publication : 1960 Importance : 320 p. Format : 30 cm Langues : Français (fre) Catégories : Architecture - Construction et conception
Architecture -- Dessins et plansIndex. décimale : 7:691 Matériaux de construction - Généralités Détails d'architecture : Répertoire de solutions d'utilite pratique pour la construction [texte imprimé] / Martin Mittag, Auteur ; Deutsche Bauzeitschrift, Auteur . - Paris : Eyrolles, 1960 . - 320 p. ; 30 cm.
Langues : Français (fre)
Catégories : Architecture - Construction et conception
Architecture -- Dessins et plansIndex. décimale : 7:691 Matériaux de construction - Généralités Réservation
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 02237 7:691 MIT Livre ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Disponible Tragwerke = Load-bearing structures = Structures porteuses
Titre : Tragwerke = Load-bearing structures = Structures porteuses Type de document : texte imprimé Editeur : München : Institut für internationale Architektur-Dokumentation Gmbh Année de publication : 2012. Importance : pp. 1066-1229 Note générale : Numéro thématique de Detail : Zeitschrift für Architecktur + Baudetail Langues : Français (fre) Catégories : Architecture - Construction et conception
Architecture - StructuresIndex. décimale : 0 Tragwerke = Load-bearing structures = Structures porteuses [texte imprimé] . - München : Institut für internationale Architektur-Dokumentation Gmbh, 2012. . - pp. 1066-1229.
Numéro thématique de Detail : Zeitschrift für Architecktur + Baudetail
Langues : Français (fre)
Catégories : Architecture - Construction et conception
Architecture - StructuresIndex. décimale : 0 Exemplaires
Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité aucun exemplaire Vol.2017:N°9 - 2017-09-01 - Konzept : Mischnutzungen = Concepts for Mixed Uses (Bulletin de Detail : Zeitschrift für Architecktur + Baudetail)
[n° ou bulletin]
Titre : Vol.2017:N°9 - 2017-09-01 - Konzept : Mischnutzungen = Concepts for Mixed Uses Type de document : texte imprimé Année de publication : 2017 Langues : Allemand (ger) Anglais (eng) Catégories : Architecture - Construction et conception
Immeubles à usages multiplesIndex. décimale : 72 Architecture Résumé :
DETAIL 9/2017, Concepts for Mixed Uses
In the post-war era, metropolitan districts were planned according to strictly functional considerations. There were neighbourhoods for living, for working and for leisure. Anyone who grew up in the 1970s, as I did, will recall the satellite towns that sprang up on the outskirts of conurbations. During the day, they were deserted; the inhabitants drove to work in other areas of town and returned to their places of residence in the evening. The urban centres, where shops and offices were located, were full of life by day, but empty after closing time. What sense would there have been in strolling through deserted pedestrian zones at night or over the weekend?
This strict separation of functions can ultimately be attributed to the Congrès Internationaux d’Architecture Moderne (CIAM) and led to great distortions in the fabric of cities. In Le Corbusier’s rationalist urban utopias, districts were ordered strictly according to function. Even visionary architects like Frank Lloyd Wright failed to recognize the far-reaching problems this implied. Today, however, we are aware of the negative effects of monofunctional metropolitan areas and appreciate interactive neighbourhoods all the more. We have gained new insights into the everyday life of cities, which has undergone profound change. Modern concepts combine housing, work and leisure – not just in a particular neighbourhood, but often within a single building – and “mixed uses” has become a magic formula that fascinates architects almost as much as urban planners.
In the September issue of Detail, we present groundbreaking concepts in which housing and shopping, work and leisure are linked, or where a library is combined with a railway station in a single building. With her assiduous choice of projects, Claudia Fuchs demonstrates that virtually no mixture of uses beneath a single roof would be impossible.
En ligne : https://www.detail-online.com/magazine/concept-concepts-for-mixed-uses-30809/ [n° ou bulletin] Vol.2017:N°9 - 2017-09-01 - Konzept : Mischnutzungen = Concepts for Mixed Uses [texte imprimé] . - 2017.
Langues : Allemand (ger) Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Architecture - Construction et conception
Immeubles à usages multiplesIndex. décimale : 72 Architecture Résumé :
DETAIL 9/2017, Concepts for Mixed Uses
In the post-war era, metropolitan districts were planned according to strictly functional considerations. There were neighbourhoods for living, for working and for leisure. Anyone who grew up in the 1970s, as I did, will recall the satellite towns that sprang up on the outskirts of conurbations. During the day, they were deserted; the inhabitants drove to work in other areas of town and returned to their places of residence in the evening. The urban centres, where shops and offices were located, were full of life by day, but empty after closing time. What sense would there have been in strolling through deserted pedestrian zones at night or over the weekend?
This strict separation of functions can ultimately be attributed to the Congrès Internationaux d’Architecture Moderne (CIAM) and led to great distortions in the fabric of cities. In Le Corbusier’s rationalist urban utopias, districts were ordered strictly according to function. Even visionary architects like Frank Lloyd Wright failed to recognize the far-reaching problems this implied. Today, however, we are aware of the negative effects of monofunctional metropolitan areas and appreciate interactive neighbourhoods all the more. We have gained new insights into the everyday life of cities, which has undergone profound change. Modern concepts combine housing, work and leisure – not just in a particular neighbourhood, but often within a single building – and “mixed uses” has become a magic formula that fascinates architects almost as much as urban planners.
In the September issue of Detail, we present groundbreaking concepts in which housing and shopping, work and leisure are linked, or where a library is combined with a railway station in a single building. With her assiduous choice of projects, Claudia Fuchs demonstrates that virtually no mixture of uses beneath a single roof would be impossible.
En ligne : https://www.detail-online.com/magazine/concept-concepts-for-mixed-uses-30809/ Réservation
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Code-barres Cote Support Localisation Section Disponibilité SL 21614 DETAIL Fascicule ESA Saint-Luc Beaux-Arts - Biblio Disponible