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READING and WRITING Intro
READING AND WRITING Intro Sabina Ostrowska Kate Adams with Wendy Asplin Christina Cavage HOW PRISM WORKS WATCH AND LISTEN 1 Video Setting the context Every unit begins with a video clip. Each video serves PREPARING TO WATCH 1 Work with a partner and answer the questions. ACTIVATING YOUR as a springboard for the unit and introduces the KNOWLEDGE 1 What are five things that you do every day? 2 What jobs do people in the mountains do? What do you think they do every day? topic in an engaging way. The clips were carefully 3 What jobs do people on islands do? What do you think they do every day? selected to pique students’ interest and prepare 4 What do you think is better, living in the mountains or living on an them to explore the unit’s topic in greater depth. As island? Why? 2 Match the sentences to the pictures (1–4) from the video. PREDICTING CONTENT they work, students develop key skills in prediction, USING VISUALS a The women wear colorful clothes. b The woman is caring for a plant. c There is a village on the island. comprehension, and discussion. d The man is catching food to eat. GLOSSARY coast (n) the land next to the ocean deep (adj) having a long distance from top to bottom, like the middle of the ocean culture (n) the habits and traditions of a country or group of people sweep (v) to clean, especially a floor, by using a broom or brush raise (v) to take care of from a young age 60 UNIT 3 SCANNING TO FIND WHILE READING INFORMATION 4 Scan the texts. -
Lbbert Wayne Wamer a Thesis Presented to the Graduate
I AN ANALYSIS OF MULTIPLE USE BUILDING; by lbbert Wayne Wamer A Thesis Presented to the Graduate Committee of Lehigh University in Candidacy for the Degree of Master of Science in Civil Engineering Lehigh University 1982 TABLE OF CCNI'ENTS ABSI'RACI' 1 1. INTRODlCI'ICN 2 2. THE CGJCEPr OF A MULTI-USE BUILDING 3 3. HI8rORY AND GRami OF MULTI-USE BUIIDINCS 6 4. WHY MULTI-USE BUIIDINCS ARE PRACTICAL 11 4.1 CGVNI'GJN REJUVINATICN 11 4. 2 EN'ERGY SAVIN CS 11 4.3 CRIME PREVENTIOO 12 4. 4 VERI'ICAL CANYOO EFFECT 12 4. 5 OVEOCRO'IDING 13 5. DESHN CHARACTERisriCS OF MULTI-USE BUILDINCS 15 5 .1 srRlCI'URAL SYSI'EMS 15 5. 2 AOCHITECI'URAL CHARACTERisriCS 18 5. 3 ELEVATOR CHARACTERisriCS 19 6. PSYCHOI..OCICAL ASPECTS 21 7. CASE srUDIES 24 7 .1 JOHN HANCOCK CENTER 24 7 • 2 WATER TOiVER PlACE 25 7. 3 CITICORP CENTER 27 8. SUMMARY 29 9. GLOSSARY 31 10. TABLES 33 11. FIGJRES 41 12. REFERENCES 59 VITA 63 iii ACKNCMLEI)(}IIENTS The author would like to express his appreciation to Dr. Lynn S. Beedle for the supervision of this project and review of this manuscript. Research for this thesis was carried out at the Fritz Engineering Laboratory Library, Mart Science and Engineering Library, and Lindennan Library. The thesis is needed to partially fulfill degree requirenents in Civil Engineering. Dr. Lynn S. Beedle is the Director of Fritz Laboratory and Dr. David VanHom is the Chainnan of the Department of Civil Engineering. The author wishes to thank Betty Sumners, I:olores Rice, and Estella Brueningsen, who are staff menbers in Fritz Lab, for their help in locating infonnation and references. -
True to the City's Teeming Nature, a New Breed of Multi-Family High Rises
BY MEI ANNE FOO MAY 14, 2016 True to the city’s teeming nature, a new breed of multi-family high rises is fast cropping up around New York – changing the face of this famous urban jungle forever. New York will always be known as the land of many towers. From early iconic Art Deco splendours such as the Empire State Building and the Chrysler Building, to the newest symbol of resilience found in the One World Trade Center, there is no other city that can top the Big Apple’s supreme skyline. Except itself. Tall projects have been proposed and built in sizeable numbers over recent years. The unprecedented boom has been mostly marked by a rise in tall luxury residential constructions, where prior to the completion of One57 in 2014, there were less than a handful of super-tall skyscrapers in New York. Now, there are four being developed along the same street as One57 alone. Billionaire.com picks the city’s most outstanding multi-family high rises on the concrete horizon. 111 Murray Street This luxury residential tower developed by Fisher Brothers and Witkoff will soon soar some 800ft above Manhattan’s Tribeca neighborhood. Renderings of the condominium showcase a curved rectangular silhouette that looks almost round, slightly unfolding at the highest floors like a flared glass. The modern design is from Kohn Pedersen Fox. An A-team of visionaries has also been roped in for the project, including David Mann for it residence interiors; David Rockwell for amenities and public spaces and Edmund Hollander for landscape architecture. -
03.031 Socc04 Final 2(R)
STATEOF CENTER CITY 2008 Prepared by Center City District & Central Philadelphia Development Corporation May 2008 STATEOF CENTER CITY 2008 Center City District & Central Philadelphia Development Corporation 660 Chestnut Street Philadelphia PA, 19106 215.440.5500 www.CenterCityPhila.org TABLEOFCONTENTSCONTENTS INTRODUCTION 1 OFFICE MARKET 2 HEALTHCARE & EDUCATION 6 HOSPITALITY & TOURISM 10 ARTS & CULTURE 14 RETAIL MARKET 18 EMPLOYMENT 22 TRANSPORTATION & ACCESS 28 RESIDENTIAL MARKET 32 PARKS & RECREATION 36 CENTER CITY DISTRICT PERFORMANCE 38 CENTER CITY DEVELOPMENTS 44 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS 48 Center City District & Central Philadelphia Development Corporation www.CenterCityPhila.org INTRODUCTION CENTER CITY PHILADELPHIA 2007 was a year of positive change in Center City. Even with the new Comcast Tower topping out at 975 feet, overall office occupancy still climbed to 89%, as the expansion of existing firms and several new arrivals downtown pushed Class A rents up 14%. For the first time in 15 years, Center City increased its share of regional office space. Healthcare and educational institutions continued to attract students, patients and research dollars to downtown, while elementary schools experienced strong demand from the growing number of families in Center City with children. The Pennsylvania Convention Center expansion commenced and plans advanced for new hotels, as occupancy and room rates steadily climbed. On Independence Mall, the National Museum of American Jewish History started construction, while the Barnes Foundation retained designers for a new home on the Benjamin Franklin Parkway. Housing prices remained strong, rents steadily climbed and rental vacancy rates dropped to 4.6%, as new residents continued to flock to Center City. While the average condo sold for $428,596, 115 units sold in 2007 for more than $1 million, double the number in 2006. -
Penn Center Plaza Transportation Gateway Application ID 8333219 Exhibit 1: Project Description
MULTIMODAL TRANSPORTATION FUND APPLICATION Center City District: Penn Center Plaza Transportation Gateway Application ID 8333219 Exhibit 1: Project Description The Center City District (CCD), a private-sector sponsored business improvement district, authorized under the Commonwealth’s Municipality Authorities Act, seeks to improve the open area and entrances to public transit between the two original Penn Center buildings, bounded by Market Street and JFK Boulevard and 15th and 16th Streets. In 2014, the CCD completed the transformation of Dilworth Park into a first class gateway to transit and a welcoming, sustainably designed civic commons in the heart of Philadelphia. In 2018, the City of Philadelphia completed the renovations of LOVE Park, between 15th and 16th Street, JFK Boulevard and Arch Street. The adjacent Penn Center open space should be a vibrant pedestrian link between the office district and City Hall, a prominent gateway to transit and an attractive setting for businesses seeking to capitalize on direct connections to the regional rail and subway system. However, it is neither well designed nor well managed. While it is perceived and used as public space, its divided ownership between the two adjacent Penn Center buildings and SEPTA has long hampered efforts for a coordinated improvement plan. The property lines runs east/west through the middle of the plaza with Two Penn Center owning the northern half, 1515 Market owning the southern half and neither party willing to make improvements without their neighbor making similar improvements. Since it opened in the early 1960s, Penn Center plaza has never lived up to its full potential. The site was created during urban renewal with the demolition of the above ground, Broad Street Station and the elevated train tracks that ran west to 30th Street. -
Innovative Structural Concept & Solution for Mega Tall Buildings
Open Access Library Journal 2017, Volume 4, e3459 ISSN Online: 2333-9721 ISSN Print: 2333-9705 Innovative Structural Concept & Solution for Mega Tall Buildings Applied to One Kilometer Skyscraper Feroz Alam Civil Engineering, The Institute of Engineers, Dhaka, Bangladesh How to cite this paper: Alam, F. (2017) Abstract Innovative Structural Concept & Solution for Mega Tall Buildings Applied to One Ki- Structural systems for tall buildings have undergone dramatic changes since lometer Skyscraper. Open Access Library the demise of the conventional rigid frames in the 1960s as the predominant Journal, 4: e3459. type of structural system for steel or concrete tall buildings. Generally, the https://doi.org/10.4236/oalib.1103459 structural systems of tall buildings are considered to be two types. One is inte- Received: February 16, 2017 rior and the other one is exterior type. The frame tube buildings have been the Accepted: April 14, 2017 most efficient structural system used for building which is in the range of 40 - Published: April 17, 2017 100 stories. In the early 1970s, Fintel (1974) indicated that properly designed Copyright © 2017 by author and Open structural walls could be used effectively as the primary lateral-load resisting Access Library Inc. system for both wind and earthquake loading in multistory buildings. This This work is licensed under the Creative study is intended to model an advanced structural system for tall buildings. In Commons Attribution International License (CC BY 4.0). this innovative concept, several parallel shear walls have been arranged in http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ both directions and connected with beams and R.C. -
Program Code Title Date Start Time CE Hours Description Tour Format
Tour Program Code Title Date Start Time CE Hours Description Accessibility Format ET101 Historic Boathouse Row 05/18/16 8:00 a.m. 2.00 LUs/GBCI Take an illuminating journey along Boathouse Row, a National Historic District, and tour the exteriors of 15 buildings dating from Bus and No 1861 to 1998. Get a firsthand view of a genuine labor of Preservation love. Plus, get an interior look at the University Barge Club Walking and the Undine Barge Club. Tour ET102 Good Practice: Research, Academic, and Clinical 05/18/16 9:00 a.m. 1.50 LUs/HSW/GBCI Find out how the innovative design of the 10-story Smilow Center for Translational Research drives collaboration and accelerates Bus and Yes SPaces Work Together advanced disease discoveries and treatment. Physically integrated within the University of Pennsylvania’s Perelman Center for Walking Advanced Medicine and Jordan Center for Medical Education, it's built to train the next generation of Physician-scientists. Tour ET103 Longwood Gardens’ Fountain Revitalization, 05/18/16 9:00 a.m. 3.00 LUs/HSW/GBCI Take an exclusive tour of three significant historic restoration and exPansion Projects with the renowned architects and Bus and No Meadow ExPansion, and East Conservatory designers resPonsible for them. Find out how each Professional incorPorated modern systems and technologies while Walking Plaza maintaining design excellence, social integrity, sustainability, land stewardshiP and Preservation, and, of course, old-world Tour charm. Please wear closed-toe shoes and long Pants. ET104 Sustainability Initiatives and Green Building at 05/18/16 10:30 a.m. -
(Between 17Th and 18Th Streets) Philadelphia, PA 19103-2838
Directions to Comcast Center One Comcast Center 1701 John F. Kennedy Boulevard (between 17th and 18th streets) Philadelphia, PA 19103-2838. One Comcast Center is located directly west of Suburban Station. You will be asked to present photo ID upon arriving at the building's security desks. The Comcast Conference Center Reception desk may be reached at 215-286-1145 from 8am to 5:30pm. Traveling from the Airport As you exit the airport, follow the combined “I-95 North and 76 West”. Follow Central Philadelphia I-76 over George Platt Bridge to I-76 West. Follow 76 West until you merge onto I- 676 (Vine Street Expressway) via exit 344 toward Central Philadelphia. Take the exit toward Broad Street/Central Philadelphia and take the 15th Street Ramp to Central Philadelphia. Turn right onto 15th Street and continue until you can turn onto JFK Boulevard. Head two blocks west and end at 1701 JFK Boulevard. (See Parking). There is a train from the airport that runs every ½ hour, from Terminals A, B, C, D, and E. Take the Airport Line to Suburban Station (about a 20 minute ride). Certain hotels will provide transportation at your request. Be sure to inquire when making your reservations. Traveling by Car From North: Take NJ turnpike to exit 4. Take Rt. 73 north to Rt. 38. Take Rt. 38 west to US 30. Take US 30 west over the Benjamin Franklin Bridge to I-676. Go south on 6th Street to Arch Street. Head west on Arch Street and turn left onto 16th Street. -
1800 Arch Street Philadelphia, PA
ENTRY FORM DVASE 2018 Excellence in Structural Engineering Awards Program PROJECT CATEGORY (check one): Buildings under $5M Buildings Over $100M Buildings $5M - $15M Other Structures Under $1M Buildings $15M - $40M Other Structures Over $1M Buildings $40M - $100M Single Family Home Approximate Total Project Cost $1,500,000,000 construction cost of Core and Shell Construction $650,000,000 facility submitted: Name of Project: Comcast Technology Center Location of Project: 1800 Arch Street Philadelphia, PA Date construction was Office Stack June of 2018 completed (M/Y): Hotel September 2018 Structural Design Firm: Affiliation: All entries must be submitted by DVASE member firms or members. Architect: Core and Shell: Foster + Partners and Kendall / Heaton Associates Interiors: Foster and Partners and Gensler General Contractor: L.F. Driscoll Company Logo (insert .jpg in box below) Important Notes: Please .pdf your completed entry form and email to [email protected]. Please also email separately 2-3 of the best .jpg images of your project, for the slide presentation at the May dinner and for the DVASE website. Include a brief (approx. 4 sentences) summary of the project for the DVASE Awards Presentation with this separate email. Provide a concise project description in the following box (one page maximum). Include the significant aspects of the project and their relationship to the judging criteria. When completed later this year, Comcast Technology Center will be an urban alternative to the sprawling suburban high-tech campuses of Silicon Valley. This high-density development will be a thriving center of innovation and is expected to produce 2,800 permanent jobs and an annual economic impact of more than $720 million. -
Fractious Firsts Carol Willis, Founding Director, the Skyscraper Museum the Tallest Building in the World Today, the 828-Meter B
Fractious Firsts Carol Willis, Founding Director, The Skyscraper Museum The tallest building in the world today, the 828-meter Burj Khalifa, as well as the one perhaps on its way to 1,000-meter height, Jeddah Tower, are bearing-wall structures – much like the first and tallest of New York’s early skyscrapers, the 1874 Tribune Tower. Thick walls (either of 19th-century brick and stone or 21st-century reinforced concrete) hold up these buildings – not a skeleton of steel, the major material and method of skyscraper construction for most of the 20th century. When the CTBUH organized the October 2019 conference “First Skyscrapers/ Skyscraper Firsts,” they fell victim to confirmation bias*. Implicit in the call for papers was a definition of “skyscraper” as a tall building constructed of steel. This was made clear in the initial emphasis on Chicago’s Home Insurance Building as the putative “first skyscraper.” When the steering committee adamantly rejected the proposal that vying presenters debate the priority of a single building in the history of the type, the conference title was adjusted to the plural: First Skyscrapers/ Skyscraper Firsts. This conceptualization is still a problem. The idea of a “first’ in the evolution of a building type that evolved from so many simultaneous forces and factors is unsound. Advances in technologies – whether the metal skeleton, passenger elevators in office buildings, or curtain walls – represent one aspect in the fairly sudden appearance of buildings of nine or ten stories in the early 1870s. But also key were the dynamics of urbanization – cities’ burgeoning populations and competition for expensive land and prime locations. -
Developments Introduction 1
2019 CENTER CITY PHILADELPHIA DEVELOPMENTS INTRODUCTION 1 DEVELOPMENTS MAP 4 6 COMMERCIAL/MIXED USE CULTURAL 9 GOVERNMENT & NONPROFIT INSTITUTIONS 10 HEALTH CARE & EDUCATION 11 HOSPITALITY 12 PUBLIC SPACE 15 RESIDENTIAL/MIXED USE 18 PROPOSED PROJECTS 29 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 39 CENTER CITY DISTRICT & CENTRAL PHILADELPHIA DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION | CENTERCITYPHILA.ORG | Philly By Drone By | Philly W / Element Hotel W / Element INTRODUCTION Building upon a decade-long, sustained national economic Two large projects east of Broad Street are transforming Phila- expansion, 23 development projects totaling $2.8 billion were delphia’s former department store district. National Real Estate completed in Center City between Fairmount and Washington Development has completed another phase of East Market avenues, river to river, in the period from January 1, 2018 to adding more than 125,000 square feet of retail to their initial August 31, 2019. Eighteen projects totaling $3 billion in new office renovation and construction of two residential towers. A investment were under construction as of September 1, 2019. hotel in the historic Stephen Girard Building is currently under Another 21 projects with a total estimated development value of construction, while work is getting started on the final Chest- $1 billion are in the planning or proposal phase. nut Street phase of this full-block redevelopment. One block to the east, The Fashion District is opening in phases throughout The biggest of the completed projects is the largest develop- the fall of 2019, offering nearly 1 million square feet of shops, ment in Philadelphia’s history: the Comcast Technology Center, restaurants and a multiplex movie theater, designed to connect home to the Four Seasons Hotel, two restaurants, two local directly with public transit while animating both Market and broadcasting networks, an innovation hub and 4,000 Comcast Filbert streets. -
Dubai-Marina-Critical-Approach2
Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation José Aragüez Columbia University Fred Levrat Studio_Summer 2008 06/16/2008 Dubai Marina_Critical Approach Introduction Comparable to the most exclusive waterfront developments in the world's leading cities, the marina will contain over 200 high‐rise buildings and comprise of an area of 50 million square feet. Upon completion it will be the world’s largest man made marina. It was carved along a 3.34km (2 mile) stretch of Dubai's shoreline and is a mixed‐use canal‐city inspired in the Venetian tradition. It will accommodate over 120 thousand people in their luxury apartment towers and villas, with a unique waterfront view. Dubai Marina is the center of Dubai’s new, fast paced business hub. The Marina’s neighbors include Internet City, where the region’s news and other communication professionals have made their home including Microsoft and Reuters, the renowned American University in Dubai, as well as, the forward‐thinking Knowledge Village. Dubai Marina is also conveniently close to Emaar Business Park and Jebel Ali Free Zone. In the Dubai Marina numerous skyscrapers are under developement. Most towers are mid range skyscrapers between 150 and over 200 meters tall. Already today it can be assumed that it will have one of the world‐wide largest high‐rise densities, comparable to Hong Kong and Manhattan. These skyscrapers over 300 meters height are either finished or are under construction: Infinity Tower: with 330 meters it will be the highest skyscraper, which has a 90º twist in the design. Princess Tower: this tower with 414 meters will be the highest residential building of the world.