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												  T1-Kovler-Purification-Of-Phosphogypsum-Israel.PdfProf. Konstantin Kovler is Head of the Department “Building Materials, Performance and Technology”, National Building Research Institute (NBRI), Faculty of Civil & Environmental Engineering, Technion - Israel Institute of Technology. His research focuses on recycling industrial by-products in construction, PURIFICATION OF PHOSPHOGYPSUM FROM high-performance cementitious materials, radioactivity of building materials, and radon mitigation. Fellow of RILEM, Editor of Materials & Structures, Cement & Concrete Composites. Chairs committees “Ecological Aspects of Construction”, “Radioactivity of Building Products,” Israeli Standards Institution. 226Ra AND HEAVY METALS FOR ITS FURTHER Director of Technion Recycling Initiative. UTILIZATION IN CONSTRUCTION: Eng. Boris Dashevsky is Research Fellow, the Department “Building Materials, Performance and TECHNOLOGICAL UTOPIA OR REALITY? Technology”, NBRI. His research interests are in technologies of manufacturing building materials using mechano-chemical activation, recycling industrial by-products (phosphogypsum, coal ash, copper slag, carbonate rock waste of dimension stone factories and quarries, construction and demolition waste – including asbestos-cement, acid tar, sulfur- and sulfonate-containing wastes) in construction. Konstantin Kovler1 , Boris Dashevsky1, David S. Kosson2 1National Building Research Institute – Prof. David S. Kosson is Cornelius Vanderbilt Professor of Engineering at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee, US, where he has appointments as Professor of Civil and Environmental
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												  Example Case Study: Milwaukee Art MuseumExample Case Study: Milwaukee Art Museum ARCH 631: Structural Systems Prof. Anne Nichols 2004 1 Contents Overview (Introduction) 1 The Milwaukee Art Museum (Background) 1 The Architect (Background) 2 The Quadracci Pavilion (Body) 4 Design Concept 4 Building Layout 4 Structural Features 8 Building Components and System 9 Burke Brise-Soleil 13 Pedestrian Bridge 14 Loading Summary 15 Gravity Loads 16 Lateral Load Resistance 20 Foundation and Soil 22 Summary Bibliography (References) i Overview On May 4, 2001, a much-anticipated addition to the Milwaukee Art Museum first opened its doors to the public. The $125-million-dollar project, designed by architect Santiago Calatrava, became an icon for the museum and the city of Milwaukee, Wisconsin even before its completion. This report presents a case study of the project. Background information regarding the architectural context for the addition will be provided, as well as a synopsis of the architect’s mastery of structural design. A number of unique elements of the building will be discussed in detail. In addition, the building’s complex structural design will be reviewed through component and system evaluation, diagrams, and simplified computer-based structural analysis. The Milwaukee Art Museum The Milwaukee Art Museum (MAM) traces its beginnings to two institutions, the Layton Art Gallery, established in 1888, and the Milwaukee Art Institute, which was established in 1918. In 1957 the groups joined together, forming the private, nonprofit Milwaukee Art Center, now known as the Milwaukee Art Museum. At this time, the Center moved to its present location on the Milwaukee waterfront Finnish architect Eero Saarinen, known for his St.
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												  The Structural Behavior of a Counter Weighted Cable Stayed BridgeThe Structural Behavior of A Counter Weighted Cable Stayed Bridge by Gregory A. Otto B. Eng. Civil Engineering (2000) Cooper Union B. Architecture (1995) Kansas State University Submitted to the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Masters of Engineering in Civil and Environmental Engineering. at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology June 2001 @2001 Massachusetts Institute of Technology All rights reserved. A Signature of Author .............................................. Department of Civil and Environ ntal Engineering il 21 May 2001 C ertified by ................................... ,o / Jerome J. Connor Professor of Civil and Environmental Engineering / Thesis Supervisor Accepted by ........................ I /X Oral Buyukozturk Chairman, Departmental Committee on Graduate Studies MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY JUL 9 20Z BARKER LIBRARIES The Structural Behavior of A Counter Weighted Cable Stayed Bridge by Gregory A. Otto Submitted to the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering on 21 May, 2000 in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Engineering in Civil and Environmental engineering. ABSTRACT Santiago Calatrava - when he introduced the counter weight cable stayed bridge typology - opened the door to the possibility of designing bridges for pursuits other than the purely utilitarian. This document explores the potential for variation within the typology by reviewing the historical development of the cable stayed bridge, the elements of the structural system, and the variation possible within these elements. A design strategy is then established for the counter weight cable stayed bridge. Using a proposal for Boston, Massachusetts (Charles River Crossing), a counter weight cable stayed bridge is systematically assessed on a component by component basis.
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												  Neville Bonner Bridge Architectural and Engineering Statement in Response to Edq Request Prepared By: Grimshaw | WspNEVILLE BONNER BRIDGE ARCHITECTURAL AND ENGINEERING STATEMENT IN RESPONSE TO EDQ REQUEST PREPARED BY: GRIMSHAW | WSP DATE OF ISSUE: 31.07.2017 DRAFT REVISION: 3 REVISION DATE DESCRIPTION 1 11.07.2017 DRAFT FOR DBC 2 24.07.2017 DRAFT FOR DBC 3 31.07.2017 FINAL DRAFT FOR SUBMISSION Copyright 2017 © DBC 2017 This publication is subject to copyright. Except as permitted under the Copyright Act 1968, no part of it may in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise) be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted without prior written permission. Enquiries should be addressed to the publishers. DESTINATION BRISBANE CONSORTIUM www.queenswharfbrisbane.com.au CONTENTS 1 BRIDGE DESIGN CONCEPT .................................................................................................................................. 4 2 MID-RIVER PIER LOCATION CHRONOLOGICAL HISTORY ............................................................................... 6 2.1 ALIGNMENT OF MID-RIVER PIER AND HYDRAULIC OPTIMISATION ................................................................ 8 2.2 SOUTH BANK CONSTRAINTS ............................................................................................................................... 8 2.3 MSQ ALTERNTAIVE CONFIGURATION AND DBC ANALSYIS .......................................................................... 10 3 PIER RELOCATION ALTERNATIVES .................................................................................................................
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												  Sevilla Relocation GuideSEVILLA GUIDE BRS Guide - Sevilla Page 1 INDEX INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................... 3 SEVILLE CUSTOMS, CULTURE, TYPICAL FOODS &FACTS ......................... 9 VISITING SEVILLE & SURROUNDINGS .................................................... 18 BANKING ............................................................................................... 22 TELECOMMUNICATION SERVICES ......................................................... 23 TRANSPORT ........................................................................................... 24 SPORTS AND LEISURE ............................................................................ 32 CULTURE AND ENTERTAINEMNT .......................................................... 36 RESTAURANTS, BARS, TAPAS AND NIGHTLIFE ...................................... 60 FOOD MARKETS .................................................................................... 77 PARKS AND GARDENS ........................................................................... 80 ISLAMIC PLACES OF INTEREST IN SEVILLE ............................................. 82 SHOPPING ............................................................................................. 84 HOSPITALS, MEDICAL CENTRES and DOCTORS ................................... 103 SEVILLE USEFUL TELEFONE NUMBERS ................................................ 108 BRS Guide - Sevilla Page 2 Introduction With a population of 803,000 inhabitants (1.5 million including the surrounding metropolitan
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												  Ju Calatrava Update 2018 03440 2018-05-234 5 CONTENTS Page 6 Page 114 Page 272 Page 410 Page 518 Page 600 INTRODUCTION ZURICH UNIVERSITY SHADOW MACHINE WAVE REGGIO EMILIA AV – DUBAI CREEK TOWER L AW FACULT Y NEW YORK DALLAS MEDIOPADANA DUBAI Page 6 ZURICH Page 280 Page 418 STATION Page 606 THE SECRET OF PHILANTHROPY REGGIO EMILIA Page 122 ORIENTE STATION OLYMPIC SPORTS UAE PAVILION AT LISBON Page 14 LYON-SAINT- COMPLEX Page 526 EXPO 2020 DAS GEHEIMNIS DER ATHENS DUBAI EXUPÉRY AIRPORT Page 308 MONS STATION PHILANTHROPIE MONS RAILWAY STATION Page 452 SATOLAS MILWAUKEE ART Page 24 MUSEUM LIGHT RAIL TRAIN Page 532 Page 610 LE SECRET DE MILWAUKEE Page 138 BRIDGE PEACE BRIDGE APPENDIX LA PHILANTHROPIE JERUSALEM CALGARY PUERTO BRIDGE Page 328 Page 612 ONDARROA SUNDIAL Page 460 Page 540 MAIN PROJECTS Page 34 Page 144 FOOTBRIDGE REGGIO EMILIA MARINA D’ARECHI ALPINE BRIDGES REDDING SALERNO Page 616 SWITZERLAND CAMPO VOLANTÍN BRIDGES REGGIO EMILIA BIOGRAPHY FOOTBRIDGE Page 336 Page 548 Page 44 BILBAO FOURTH BRIDGE Page 468 YUAN ZE UNIVERSITY Page 617 SWIMMING POOL Page 156 EXHIBITIONS ETH ZURICH ON THE CANAL WORLD TRADE CAMPUS NEW PRIZES AND AWARDS SONDICA AIRPORT GRANDE CENTER BUILDING COMPLEX Page 52 VENICE TAIPEI AND TRANSPORTATION Page 618 BIBLIOGRAPHY ERNSTING’S CONTROL TOWER Page 342 HUB Page 554 WAREHOUSE BILBAO NEW YORK COESFELD-LETTE LIÈGE-GUILLEMINS UNIVERSITY Page 620 Page 176 RAILWAY STATION Page 476 OF SOUTH FLORIDA CREDITS Page 68 KUWAIT PAVILION LIÈGE CHICAGO SPIRE POLYTECHNIC ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS CHICAGO STADELHOFEN EXPO ’92 Page 352 CAMPUS SEVILLE STATION Page 484 ZURICH BRIDGE OF EUROPE MASTER PLAN ORLÉANS LAKELAND Page 184 SAMUEL BECKETT Page 82 TENERIFE Page 362 BRIDGE Page 560 DUBLIN BACH DE RODA- AUDITORIUM BODEGAS YSIOS MUSEUM OF SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE LAGUARDIA FELIPE II BRIDGE Page 490 TOMORROW BARCELONA RIO DE JANEIRO Page 208 Page 374 JAMES JOYCE Page 90 CITY OF ARTS MUJER BRIDGE BRIDGE Page 572 BCE PLACE: AND SCIENCES: BUENOS AIRES DUBLIN ST.
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												  Of Zone Around Phosphogypsum Waste Heap in Wiślinka (Northern Poland)E3S Web of Conferences 1, 10006 (2013) DOI: 10.1051/e3sconf/20130110006 C Owned by the authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2013 The radiochemical contamination (210Po and 238U) of zone around phosphogypsum waste heap in Wiślinka (northern Poland) A. Boryło1, B. Skwarzec1 and G. Olszewski1 1 University of Gdańsk, Faculty of Chemistry, Sobieskiego 18, Gdańsk, Poland, [email protected] Abstract. The aim of this work was the determination of the impact of phosphogypsum waste heap in Wiślinka (northern Poland) for radiological protection of zone around waste heap. The activity of 210Po, 234U, and 238U were measured using an alpha spectrometer. The values of uranium and polonium concentration in water with immediate area of waste heap are considerably higher than in the waters of the Martwa Wisła river. The values of activity ratio 234U/238U are approximately about one in the phosphogypsum (0.97±0.05) and in the water of retention reservoir and pumping station (0.92±0.01 and 0.99±0.08), while in the water from the Martwa Wisła river they are slightly higher than one (1.03±0.07 and 1.17±0.06). In the analyzed plants species the highest amounts of polonium and uranium were found in ruderal plants samples as well as hygrophilous plant samples. The more amounts of 210Po and 238U radionuclides were accumulated mainly in the roots of the analyzed plant species. The significant source of polonium and uranium in the natural environment is dry and wet atmospheric fallout in the immediate vicinity of phosphogypsum waste heap and the transfer via root for distant areas.
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												  Jun 0 2 2003A UNIQUE BRIDGE SYSTEM By Florent Brunet Civil Engineering Diploma ESTP in Paris, 2003 Submitted to the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF ENGINEERING IN CIVIL AND ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING at the MASSACHUSETS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY MASSACHUSETTS INSTITUT OF TECHNOLOGY June 2003 JUN 0 2 2003 02003 Florent Brunet LIBRARIES All rights reserved. The author hereby grants to MIT permission to reproduce and to distribute publicly paper and electronic copies of this thesis document in whole or in part. Signature of author: Department of Civil Engineering May 11, 2003 Certified by: Jerome J.Connor Thesis Supervisor Professor, Civiland Environmental Engineering Accepted by:- Oral Buyukozturk Chairman, Department Committee on Graduate Studies BARKER A UNIQUE BRIDGE SYSTEM By Florent Brunet Submitted to the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering On May 11 2003 in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Engineering In Civil and Environmental Engineering ABSTRACT This thesis examines several remarkable bridges designed by Santiago Calatrava, a Spanish architect-engineer. In those bridges, Calatrava exploits the phenomenon of torsion of the deck to create a certain longitudinal asymmetry. This asymmetry enables the designer to include original features like a big balcony one side of the bridge, "to emphasize the position of the bridge in relationship to the city around it, or the direction of the water, or even the position of the sun. It permits to sensitize the bridge itself, as a phenomenon set into the surrounding landscape" (Conversation with Students, Calatrava). Actually an inclined arch stabilized by steel arms or hangers generates the sufficient torsion defying equilibrium rules.
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												  Santiago Calatrava Complete Works 1979-2007Philip Jodidio CALATRAVA Santiago Calatrava Complete Works 1979-2007 TASCHEN HONG KONG KOLN LONDON LOS ANGELES MADRID PARIS TOKYO CONTENTS rcitats- und ['.lev !4 P.ige 128 THE SECRET ALPINE BRIDGES LYON-SAINT OF PHILANTHROPY SWITZERLAND EXUPERY AIRPORT RAILWAY STATION SATOLAS SWIMMING POOL DAS GEHEIMNIS Pnue 144 DER PHILANTHROPIE PUERTO BRIDGE ONDARROA P:igr 24 ERNSTING'S LE SECRET DE WAREHOUSE P.igc I W LA PHILANTHROPIE COESFELD-LETTE CAMPO VOLANTIN FOOTBRIDGE STADELHOFEN STATION ZURICH SONDICA AIRPORT AND I'.iee 82 CONTROL TOWER BACH DE RODA- BILBAO FELIPE II BRIDGE BARCELONA KUWAIT PAVILION Page '(I) EXPO '92 BCE PLACE: SEVILLE GALLERIA AND HERITAGE SQUARE TENERIFE TORONTO AUDITORIUM SANTA CRUZ DE TENERIFE ALAMILLO BRIDGE l>;lKc 214 AND LA CARTUJA CITY OF ARTS VIADUCT AND SCIENCES: SEVILLE PLANETARIUM, SCIENCE MUSEUM, I',ice 11)4 AND L'UMBRACLE COLLSEROLA VALENCIA COMMUNICATIONS I'.igc 246 TOWER BARCELONA OPERA HOUSE VALENCIA MONTJUIC Page 260 COMMUNICATIONS ALAMEDA TOWER BRIDGE AND BARCELONA SUBWAY STATION VALENCIA ZURICH UNIVERSITY, LAW FACULTY ZURICH Page V)4 Page 110 SHADOW MUJER BRIDGE APPENDIX MACHINE BUENOS AIRES NEW YORK Page 112 MAIN PROJECTS Page 286 TURNING TORSO MALMO REMODELLING P.lge 116 OF PLAZA DE ESPANA BIOGRAPHY ALCOY BRIDGES OVER THE HOOFDVAART HOOFDDORP PRIZES AND ORIENTE STATION AWARDS, LISBON BIBLIOGRAPHY NEW YORK Page )24 TIMES CAPSULE Page 519 MILWAUKEE ART NEW YORK CREDITS. MUSEUM Page 410 MILWAUKEE ACKNOWLEDGE- WAVE MENTS Page (44 DALLAS SUNDIAL FOOTBRIDGE Page 418 REDOING OLYMPIC SPORTS COMPLEX ATHENS POOLE HARBOUR BRIDGE POOLE 8O SOUTH STREET TOWER NEW YORK FOURTH BRIDGE ON THE CANAL Page 480 GRANDE WORLD TRADE VENICE CENTER TRANSPORTATION HUB LIEGE-GUILLEMINS NEW YORK RAILWAY Page 488 STATION CHICAGO SPIRE TOWER CHICAGO BRIDGE OF EUROPE ORLEANS GOVERNORS Page 182 ISLAND GONDOLA BODEGAS YSIOS CARS LAGUARDIA NEW YORK.
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												  Technology As a Source of BeautyTechnology as a Source of Beauty 1 Cathedral - Amiens, France - 1220-1406 2 Abbey of Fontenay - Bourgogne, France - 1139-47 3 Abbey of Fontenay - Bourgogne, France - 1139-47 4 Pavilion Heidi Weber - Zurich, Switzerland - La Tourette - Lyon, France - Le Corbusier Le Corbusier 5 Farnsworth House - Mies van der Rohe 6 Project at ETH by Santiago Calatrava 7 Sketches by Santiago Calatrava 8 Furniture by Santiago Calatrava 9 Furniture by Santiago Calatrava 10 Ernsting Warehouse - Coesfeld-Lette, Germany - Santiago Calatrava 1984 11 Ernsting Warehouse - Coesfeld-Lette, Germany - Santiago Calatrava 1984 12 Ernsting Warehouse - Coesfeld-Lette, Germany - Santiago Calatrava 1984 13 Ernsting Warehouse - Coesfeld-Lette, Germany - Santiago Calatrava 1984 14 Bac de Roda Bridge - Barcelona, Spain - Santiago Calatrava - 1987 15 Alamillo Bridge - Seville, Spain - Santiago Calatrava - 1992 16 Volantin Bridge - Bilbao, Spain - Santiago Calatrava 1991 17 Volantin Bridge - Bilbao, Spain - Santiago Calatrava 1991 18 Volantin Bridge - Bilbao, Spain - Santiago Calatrava 1991 19 Volantin Bridge - Bilbao, Spain - Santiago Calatrava 1991 20 Volantin Bridge - Bilbao, Spain - Santiago Calatrava 1991 21 Volantin Bridge - Bilbao, Spain - Santiago Calatrava 1991 22 Volantin Bridge - Bilbao, Spain - Santiago Calatrava 1991 23 Volantin Bridge - Bilbao, Spain - Santiago Calatrava 1991 24 Lyon-Satolas TGV Station - Santiago Calatrava - 1989-94 25 Lyon-Satolas TGV Station - Santiago Calatrava - 1989-94 26 City of Arts and Sciences - Valencia, Spain - Santiago Calatrava - 1991-2004
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												  Andalusia Spain Culinaria with European Art Curator Ronni Baer & Chef Deborah Hansen November 12 –19, 2017 • Granada & Seville, Spain GranadaAndalusia Spain Culinaria with European Art Curator Ronni Baer & Chef Deborah Hansen November 12 –19, 2017 • Granada & Seville, Spain Granada Beyond the magnificent Moorish Alhambra, visitors will find a distinctive cuisine and a charming city that was once home to celebrated writers and artists. Like Agra, India, and the Taj Mahal, the Andalusian city of Granada in southern Spain is so well known for a single monument—the Alhambra, a walled fortress housing magnificent 13th- to 15th-century Moorish palaces and gardens—that the city itself is sometimes overlooked. With more than two million visitors descending on the Alhambra, a Unesco World Heritage site, every year, the city’s tourism industry had settled into a somewhat formulaic routine of shuttling visitors in and out of the city in about 24 hours. But recently, some other ancient structures have been restored, and the region’s distinc- tive gastronomy has come into its own. The city that was home to the poet Federico García Lorca, the painter José Guerrero, and the composer Manuel de Falla has deep cultural roots, but now a new crop of small foundations and independent exhibition spaces has revived its arty buzz. Let the Alhambra wait a bit while getting seduced by the city that has grown up around it. Andrew Ferren New York Times (August 10, 2017) Granada seems to specialize in evocative history and good liv- ing. Settle down in the old center and explore monuments of the Moorish civilization and its conquest. Taste the treats of a North African-flavored culture that survives here today.
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												  The Environmental Behaviour of Poloniumtechnical reportS series no. 484 Technical Reports SeriEs No. 484 The Environmental Behaviour of Polonium F. Carvalho, S. Fernandes, S. Fesenko, E. Holm, B. Howard, The Environmental Behaviour of Polonium P. Martin, M. Phaneuf, D. Porcelli, G. Pröhl, J. Twining @ THE ENVIRONMENTAL BEHAVIOUR OF POLONIUM The following States are Members of the International Atomic Energy Agency: AFGHANISTAN GEORGIA OMAN ALBANIA GERMANY PAKISTAN ALGERIA GHANA PALAU ANGOLA GREECE PANAMA ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA GUATEMALA PAPUA NEW GUINEA ARGENTINA GUYANA PARAGUAY ARMENIA HAITI PERU AUSTRALIA HOLY SEE PHILIPPINES AUSTRIA HONDURAS POLAND AZERBAIJAN HUNGARY PORTUGAL BAHAMAS ICELAND QATAR BAHRAIN INDIA REPUBLIC OF MOLDOVA BANGLADESH INDONESIA ROMANIA BARBADOS IRAN, ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF RUSSIAN FEDERATION BELARUS IRAQ RWANDA BELGIUM IRELAND SAN MARINO BELIZE ISRAEL SAUDI ARABIA BENIN ITALY SENEGAL BOLIVIA, PLURINATIONAL JAMAICA SERBIA STATE OF JAPAN SEYCHELLES BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA JORDAN SIERRA LEONE BOTSWANA KAZAKHSTAN SINGAPORE BRAZIL KENYA SLOVAKIA BRUNEI DARUSSALAM KOREA, REPUBLIC OF SLOVENIA BULGARIA KUWAIT SOUTH AFRICA BURKINA FASO KYRGYZSTAN SPAIN BURUNDI LAO PEOPLE’S DEMOCRATIC SRI LANKA CAMBODIA REPUBLIC SUDAN CAMEROON LATVIA SWAZILAND CANADA LEBANON SWEDEN CENTRAL AFRICAN LESOTHO SWITZERLAND REPUBLIC LIBERIA SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC CHAD LIBYA TAJIKISTAN CHILE LIECHTENSTEIN THAILAND CHINA LITHUANIA THE FORMER YUGOSLAV COLOMBIA LUXEMBOURG REPUBLIC OF MACEDONIA CONGO MADAGASCAR TOGO COSTA RICA MALAWI TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO CÔTE D’IVOIRE MALAYSIA TUNISIA CROATIA MALI