Auswahl der wissenschaftlichen Literatur zum Thema „New Delhi (India) Buildings“

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Zeitschriftenartikel zum Thema "New Delhi (India) Buildings":

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Khosla, Martand. „The Lahori Gate Polyclinic, New Delhi, INDIA. Building for an inclusive city.“ Astrágalo. Cultura de la Arquitectura y la Ciudad 1, Nr. 1 (2020): 75–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.12795/astragalo.2020.i27.05.

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MANN, MICHAEL, und SAMIKSHA SEHRAWAT. „A City With a View: The Afforestation of the Delhi Ridge, 1883–1913“. Modern Asian Studies 43, Nr. 2 (März 2009): 543–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0026749x07002867.

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AbstractDespite the contemporary importance of the Ridge forest to the city of Delhi as its most important ‘green lung’, the concept of urban forestry has been explored neither by urban historians studying Delhi nor by environmental historians. This article places the colonial efforts to plant a forest on the Delhi Ridge from 1883 to 1913 within the context of the gradual deforestation of the countryside around Delhi and the local colonial administration's preoccupation with encouraging arboriculture. This project of colonial forestry prioritized the needs of the white colonizers living in Delhi, while coming into conflict repeatedly with indigenous peasants. With the decision to transfer the capital to Delhi in 1911, the afforestation of the Delhi Ridge received a further stimulus. Town planners' visions of a building the capital city of New Delhi were meant to assert the grandeur of British rule through imposing buildings, with the permanence of the British in India being emphasised by the strategic location of the ruins of earlier empires within the city. The principles of English landscape gardening inspired the planning of New Delhi, with the afforestation of the Delhi Ridge being undertaken to provide a verdant backdrop for—the Government House and the Secretariat—the administrative centre of British government in India. Imperial notions of landscaping, which were central to the afforestation of the Delhi Ridge epitomised colonial rule and marginalized Indians.
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Gupta, Sonika. „Frontiers in Flux: Indo-Tibetan Border: 1946–1948“. India Quarterly: A Journal of International Affairs 77, Nr. 1 (10.02.2021): 42–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0974928420983095.

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On the eve of Indian Independence, as Britain prepared to devolve the Crown’s treaties with Tibet to the Indian government, the Tibetan government was debating its future treaty relationship with India under the 1914 Simla Convention and associated Indo-Tibetan Trade Regulations. Soon after Indian independence, Tibetan government made an expansive demand for return of Tibetan territory along the McMahon Line and beyond. This led to a long diplomatic exchange between Lhasa, New Delhi and London as India deliberated its response to the Tibetan demand. This article decodes the voluminous correspondence between February 1947 and January 1948 that flowed between the British/Indian Mission in Lhasa, the Political Officer in Sikkim, External Affairs Ministry in Delhi and the Foreign Office in London, on the Simla Convention and the ensuing Tibetan territorial demand. Housed at the National Archives in New Delhi, this declassified confidential communication provides crucial context for newly independent Indian state’s relationship with Tibet. It also reveals the intricacies of Tibetan elite politics that affected decision-making in Lhasa translating to a fragmented and often contradictory policy in forging its new relationship with India. Most importantly, this Tibetan territorial demand undermined the diplomatic efficacy of Tibet’s 1947 Trade Mission to India entangling its outcome with the resolution of this issue. This was a lost opportunity for both India and Tibet in building an agreement on the frontier which worked to their mutual disadvantage in the future.
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Golay, Alain, und Ian Firth. „The Baha’i House of Worship, New Delhi, India“. Structural Engineering International 11, Nr. 3 (August 2001): 214. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/101686601780346959.

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Salam Azad, Abdus, Mohd Salman, S. C. Kaushik und Dibakar Rakshit. „Energy saving potential of tubular light pipe system with different colors on internal surfaces“. International Journal of Energy Sector Management 14, Nr. 4 (18.09.2019): 793–837. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijesm-12-2018-0001.

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Purpose Lighting in building sectors (consumes the highest energy in commercial buildings and the second highest in residential buildings in India) has very much potential for energy conservation in buildings. With the use of daylighting system, energy consumption in lighting can be lowered up to 30 to 40 per cent. Design/methodology/approach An experimental effort has been made in this paper to explore the internal wall coloring effect on the performance of tubular light pipe. Trace-pro software has been used and validated. With the help of this software, light pipe has been designed and simulated in a ray tracing mode. Assessment of four globally used prediction models has also been conducted to compare the performances in different seasons for light pipes in the composite climate of New Delhi. Findings It has been conducted based on three statistical indicators as mean bias error, root mean square error and R2. Using regression, an empirical model for average internal illuminance has been developed as a function of light reflectance value (LRV) and solar altitude angle. Trace-pro results confirmed that maximum internal illuminance can be obtained with wall surfaces coated with high LRV color. Finally, by using of a single light pipe system for a test room with the artificial lighting system and applying continuous dimming control, the amount of electrical energy has been saved up to 38.5 per cent per year. Originality/value After going through the literature, it has been identified that there has been no paper published which explores the effect of colors of the internal walls on the performance of the light pipe. Along with this, the comparison between existing empirical performance models and find out which model gives the best result in different seasons has been carried out for New Delhi, India.
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Johnson, David A. „Competing Visions of Empire in the Colonial Built Environment: Sir Bradford Leslie and the Building of New Delhi“. Britain and the World 8, Nr. 1 (März 2015): 27–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/brw.2015.0166.

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In 1911, the Government of India transferred the imperial seat of government from Calcutta to Delhi. The decision initiated an ambitious colonial building project that consumed massive human, material, and financial resources for the next two decades. The new city was meant to be not just a site of government but also a symbol of a new direction in British rule. As such, the transfer and building of a new capital caused tremendous debate in parliament, in the press, and in the worlds of art and finance. This paper examines one of these debates: the precise location of the new capital in the Delhi area. When news reached London that the Government of India planned to build the new capital in a largely rural area with little connection to Delhi's existing European community, Sir Bradford Leslie, an eminent railway engineer with long experience in India, prepared a town plan that placed the capital back within Delhi's European civil lines. His plan, the controversy it created, and its eventual rejection by the Government of India highlighted arguments over the meaning of British rule in India and who should benefit from it.
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Shokoohy, Mehrdad, und Natalie H. Shokoohy. „The Dark Gate, the Dungeons, the royal escape route and more: survey of Tughluqabad, second interim report“. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 62, Nr. 3 (Oktober 1999): 423–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0041977x00018528.

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Tughluqabad, situated 18 kilometres south-east of New Delhi, is the oldest surviving sultanate town in India. It was built by Sultan Ghiyāth al-dīn Tughluq between 1320 and 1323, and its well preserved walls, its street layout and the remains of its buildings provide us with the earliest existing example of Indo-Muslim urban planning and its architectural components. The town was designed by Ahmad b. Ayāz, an Anatolian architect and a nobleman of the Tughluq court, who was responsible for the design of many of the early Tughluq buildings1 and who was later raised to the rank of Grand Vizier at the time of Muhammad b. Tughluq (1325–51), but was put to death by Fīrūz Shāh Tughluq (1351–88) in the early days of his reign.
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Leo Samuel, DG, SM Shiva Nagendra und MP Maiya. „A study of pipe parameters on the performance of cooling tower-based thermally activated building system“. Indoor and Built Environment 27, Nr. 2 (27.09.2016): 219–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1420326x16670202.

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Passive cooling systems are energy efficient and eco-friendly alternatives to mechanical cooling systems. In this paper, the cooling tower-based thermally activated building system, which acts as an indirect evaporative cooling system, has been investigated using a computational fluid dynamics tool for the hot semi-arid climate of New Delhi. Three design parameters namely spacing, vertical position and arrangement of pipes embedded in the roof and floor were analysed for their influence on the cooling performance of the system. The results indicate that reducing pipe spacing from 0.3 to 0.1 m and moving the pipes closer to the inner surface from 0.135 to 0.015 m could reduce the operative temperatures by 1.6 and 2.7℃, respectively. For the same total water flow rate, a change in pipe arrangement from serpentine to parallel showed insignificant influence on the indoor comfort indices. The best combination of these three parameters can achieve an average operative temperature of 29℃, which is comfortable for the hot semi-arid climate of New Delhi where the adaptive neutral temperature was found to be 29.4℃. This study will contribute to heating, ventilating, air-conditioning designers’ understanding of the importance of these parameters for achieving the required comfort in buildings in India.
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Hoyt, Lorlene, Renu Khosla und Claudia Canepa. „Leaves, Pebbles, and Chalk: Building a Public Participation GIS in New Delhi, India“. Journal of Urban Technology 12, Nr. 1 (April 2005): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10630730500116479.

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Dhawan, Ranjit Kumar. „Korea’s ‘New Southern Policy’ Towards India: An Analysis“. Jadavpur Journal of International Relations 24, Nr. 1 (23.02.2020): 53–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0973598420906248.

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The Moon Jae-in administration in South Korea (hereafter Korea) initiated the ‘New Southern Policy’ in 2017 to foster closer relations with ASEAN and India and bring them at par with the four major powers—the United States of America (USA), China, Russia and Japan, which have traditionally played a dominant role in Korea’s foreign affairs. Korea’s strategy through this new policy has been to diversify its foreign relations and lessen dependence on these four major powers of the Northeast Asian region. In this policy shift India is projected as one of the key partners for Korea. However, there has not been much progress in Korea’s relations with India in the last 2 years. The New Southern Policy is also not compatible with US-led ‘Indo-Pacific strategy’ in which India is an integral component. This article argues that Seoul’s New Southern Policy toward New Delhi shall remain limited and would largely focus on developing economic relations rather than building security cooperation between the two countries.

Dissertationen zum Thema "New Delhi (India) Buildings":

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Saniotis, Arthur. „Sacred worlds : an analysis of mystical mastery of North Indian Faqirs“. Title page, contents and abstract only, 2002. http://web4.library.adelaide.edu.au/theses/09PH/09phs227.pdf.

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Bhandari, Parul. „Spouse selection in New Delhi : a study of upper middle class marriages“. Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2014. https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.708142.

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Prasad, Nandana. „The JayJay Orphanage in New Delhi, India, a haven and home“. Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/ftp03/MQ40433.pdf.

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Vallianatos, Helen. „Food, gender & power : poor & pregnant in New Delhi, India /“. view abstract or download file of text, 2004. http://wwwlib.umi.com/cr/uoregon/fullcit?p3136450.

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Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Oregon, 2004.
Typescript. Includes vita and abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 300-341). Also available for download via the World Wide Web; free to University of Oregon users.
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Renzi, Federica. „Progetto di un museo della città a Mehrauli, New Delhi, India“. Master's thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2012. http://amslaurea.unibo.it/3630/.

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Il mio lavoro di Tesi prende in considerazione la possibilità di riportare alla vita un antico luogo che ha smarrito il suo senso nella città contemporanea. Si tratta dell’area della vasca dello Hauz-i-Shamsi,suggestiva per il legame forte con l’elemento acqua. Il tema progettuale è quello di mantenere questa zona come fonte attrattiva turistica poiché sede del Museo della città di Delhi, riconnettendolo con le altre aree di interesse e con i villaggi circostanti, diventando insieme al parco archeologico di Mehrauli un grande luogo socio culturale della collettività. Risulta evidente di conseguenza, che l'architettura dell'edificio collettivo, o più semplicemente edificio pubblico, si lega indissolubilmente alla vita civile e al suo sviluppo. In tal senso l'analisi storica è il primo momento di un lavoro che tende a definirsi nell'ambito più propriamente disciplinare, progettuale, attraverso l'analisi del ruolo urbano di tali edifici. Per questo motivo i capitoli sono così suddivisi: nel primo si riportano brevi cenni sulla storia dell’India, per poi concentrarsi sulla storia delle evoluzioni urbane di Delhi fino ad arrivare alla progettazione nel XX secolo di Nuova Delhi, esempio di città di fondazione. Nel secondo capitolo si riporta un’analisi dell’area di Mehrauli con un breve elenco dei principali monumenti, fondamentali per capire l’importanza del Parco archeologico, luogo indicato come Patrimonio dell’UNESCO. Ritengo che il viaggio in India sia per un architetto un’esperienza travolgente: non a caso questa tappa ha segnato profondamente le opere e il lavoro di due maestri quali Louis I. Kahn e Le Corbusier. Ho dedicato, infatti, il terzo capitolo ad alcune considerazioni su quest’argomento. Il quarto capitolo vuole essere un’analisi delle principali architetture indiane quali padiglioni, moschee, templi sacri. Nella cultura indiana l’architettura è legata alle religioni del paese e credo che si possano capire le architetture solo dopo aver compreso la complessità del panorama religioso. Si sono analizzati anche i principi compositivi in particolare il ruolo delle geometrie sia nelle architetture tipiche, sia nella pianificazione delle città di fondazione. Il quinto capitolo è un approfondimento sul rapporto architettura-acqua. Prima con brevi cenni e foto suggestive sul rapporto nella storia dell’architettura, poi con spiegazioni sul ruolo sacro dell’acqua in India. Il sesto capitolo, infine, è un approfondimento sul progetto del Museo della città di Delhi.
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Favero, Paolo. „India Dreams : Cultural Identity among Young Middle Class Men in New Delhi“. Doctoral thesis, Stockholms universitet, Socialantropologiska institutionen, 2005. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:su:diva-344.

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In 1991 the Indian government officially sanctioned the country’s definitive entry into the global market and into a new era. This study focuses on the generation that epitomizes this new era and is based on fieldwork among young English-speaking, educated, Delhi-based men involved in occupations such as tourism, Internet, multinationals, journalism and sports. These young men construct their role in society by promoting themselves as brokers in the ongoing exchanges between India and the outer world. Together they constitute a heterogeneous whole with different class-, caste- and regional background. Yet, they can all be seen as members of the ‘middle class’ occupying a relatively privileged position in society. They consider the opening of India to the global market as the key-event that has made it possible for them to live an “interesting life” and to avoid becoming “boring people”. This exploration into the life-world of these young men addresses in particular how they construct their identities facing the messages and images that they are exposed to through work- and leisure-networks. They understand themselves and what surrounds them by invoking terms such as ‘India’ and ‘West’, ‘tradition’ and ‘modernity’, mirroring the debates on change that have gone on in India since colonization. Yet, they imaginatively re-work the content of these discourses and give the quoted terms new meanings. In their usage ‘being Indian’ is turned into a ‘global’, ‘modern’ and ‘cosmopolitan’ stance while ‘being Westernized’ becomes a marker of ‘backwardness’ and lack of sophistication. Their experiences mark out the popularity of notions of ‘Indianness’ in contemporary metropolitan India. The study focuses on how social actors themselves experience their self-identity and how these experiences are influenced by the actors’ involvement with international flows of images and conceptualizations. It will primarily approach cultural identities through labels of belonging to abstract categories with shifting reference (referred to them as ‘phantasms’) such as ‘India’, ‘West’, etc. The study suggests that the ‘import’ of trans-national imagination into everyday life gives birth to sub-cultural formations, new ‘communities of imagination’. Their members share a similar imagination of themselves, of Delhi, their country and the world.
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Grover, D. „Gender and achievement : studies in English medium schools in New Delhi, India“. Thesis, University of Sussex, 1989. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.495756.

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Potente, Margherita. „Mhrauli, New Delhi, India: riqualificazione del parco archeologico e progetto di nuovi spazi museali“. Master's thesis, Alma Mater Studiorum - Università di Bologna, 2012. http://amslaurea.unibo.it/3628/.

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Lo spazio periurbano della città di Mehrauli è caratterizzato dalla massiccia presenza di reperti archeologici di importanza rilevante. L’intervento si pone come obbiettivo la valorizzazione di questo vasto patrimonio storico-culturale attraverso il progetto di un parco archeologico che alterna verde attrezzato ad un reticolo di percorsi connettivi. In particolare il parco archeologico individua un sistema museale capace di connettere il tessuto urbano della città ai reperti storici più rilevanti. Il sistema parco si connette quindi alla città attraverso la realizzazione di servizi, dove oltre al museo possono essere individuati: un mercato, un aggregato residenziale e differenti edifici che possono ospitare in maniera flessibile diverse attività.
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Murali, Sharanya. „Performing ethnographic encounters : walking in contemporary Delhi“. Thesis, University of Exeter, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10871/24399.

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This thesis is an attempt to interrogate the relationship between everyday walking and the contemporary Indian city, specifically the contemporary cultural and geographical space of Delhi--—a postcolonial city that functions simultaneously as a “global” city and a “walled city” (King, Spaces). While walking as performance art is of increasing relevance in the contemporary Indian city, the scope of this project restricts itself to examining the nature of everyday walking and its ties to everyday life, heritage and urban memory. Engaging with walking as a form of performance ethnography, this thesis considers a range of walks—heritage walks, commemorative memory walks and a form of the Situationist dérive—in the contemporary city of Delhi to ask: What can walking as an activity of performance ethnography tell us about how architecture, violence and the urban imagination dictate our lives that urban form and histories alone cannot? What is the relationship between forms of urban memory, everyday life, and heritage in an Indian city—Delhi, in this case—and how do the various kinds of walks inform this relationship? What are the various kinds of walks that emerge in response to and dialogue with site, and how do New and Old Delhi serve as models for this? This thesis is primarily about everyday walking practices in urban India, but in becoming so, it also attempts to crucially interrogate walking as ethnography as well as the practice of ethnography itself, specifically performance ethnography. It argues that some of the productive ways to engage with these practices are by re/considering walking as a practice of performance ethnography of the city, through the selective lenses of everyday life, heritage and urban memory.
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Kumar, Shefali. „The search for spatial order in squatter settlements : a case study of New Delhi, India“. Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1998. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape10/PQDD_0015/MQ54225.pdf.

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Bücher zum Thema "New Delhi (India) Buildings":

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White, Anthony G. Architecture of New Delhi, India: A selected bibliography. Monticello, Ill: Vance Bibliographies, 1986.

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Singh, Malvika. New Delhi, making of a capital. New Delhi, India: Lustre Press, 2009.

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Nath, Aman. Dome over India: Rashtrapati Bhavan. Mumbai: India Book House, 2002.

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Singh, Malvika. New Delhi, making of a capital. New Delhi, India: Lustre Press, 2009.

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Mathur, Satish. Mansion nonpareil: Marvel on Raisina Hill. New Delhi: President's Secretariat, 2006.

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Prasad, H. Y. Sharada. Rashtrapati Bhavan: The story of the President's House. [New Delhi]: Publication Division, Ministry of Information and Broadcasting in association with National Institute of Design for Rashtrapati Bhavan, 1992.

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Chaudhuri, Dhruva N. New Delhi down the decades: A behind-the-lens view of the city. New Delhi: Niyogi Books, 2013.

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Singh, Dhirendra. Sentinels of Raisina Hill. New Delhi: Timeless Books, 2011.

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World Movement for Democracy. Assembly. Building the World Movement for Democracy: New Delhi, India, February 14-17, 1999. Washington, DC: National Endowment for Democracy, 1999.

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Sinha, Navanita. Democracies in transition: Opportunities and challenges for Nepal, a report : January 22-24, 2009, New Delhi, India. New Delhi: WISCOMP, 2010.

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Buchteile zum Thema "New Delhi (India) Buildings":

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Parlewar, Prafulla. „Rehabilitation of K. G. Road Complex at New Delhi, India“. In Case Studies in Building Rehabilitation, 1–15. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-49202-1_1.

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Joseline, Dyana, Hareesh Haridasan, Sundar Rathnarajan, Divya Rani, Thangadurai Raja, Radhakrishna G. Pillai, Amlan K. Sengupta und Arun Menon. „Restoration of Reinforced Lime Concrete Sunshades of a Century Old Heritage Building in New Delhi, India“. In RILEM Bookseries, 778–87. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-99441-3_84.

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Chevuturi, A., A. P. Dimri und U. B. Gunturu. „Winter Hailstorm over New Delhi, India“. In Geostatistical and Geospatial Approaches for the Characterization of Natural Resources in the Environment, 867–71. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-18663-4_134.

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Ganguly, Nandita D., und Chris Tzanis. „High Surface Ozone Episodes at New Delhi, India“. In On a Sustainable Future of the Earth's Natural Resources, 445–53. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-32917-3_26.

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Kulshrestha, U. C., A. K. Sarkar, S. S. Srivastava und D. C. Parashar. „Wet-Only and Bulk Deposition Studies at New Delhi (India)“. In Acid Reign ’95?, 2137–42. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1995. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-0864-8_44.

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Lo, Catherine Yuk-ping. „Audience Acceptance in India: Case Studies in New Delhi, Mumbai, and Imphal“. In HIV/AIDS in China and India, 139–60. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137504210_8.

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Jain, M. C., S. Kumar, R. Wassmann, S. Mitra, S. D. Singh, J. P. Singh, R. Singh, A. K. Yadav und S. Gupta. „Methane emissions from irrigated rice fields in northern India (New Delhi)“. In Methane Emissions from Major Rice Ecosystems in Asia, 75–83. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-010-0898-3_7.

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Patil, Parth, K. V. S. Teja und Himanshu Tyagi. „Use of Phase Change Materials for Energy-Efficient Buildings in India“. In New Research Directions in Solar Energy Technologies, 305–27. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-0594-9_11.

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Sidhu, Balsher Singh, Dikshant Sharma, Tushar Tuteja, Smit Gupta und Arun Kumar. „Human Health Risk Assessment of Heavy Metals from Bhalaswa Landfill, New Delhi, India“. In Management of Natural Resources in a Changing Environment, 215–23. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-12559-6_16.

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Boken, Vijendra K. „Groundwater Crisis of a Mega City: A Case Study of New Delhi, India“. In Balanced Urban Development: Options and Strategies for Liveable Cities, 211–19. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-28112-4_14.

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Konferenzberichte zum Thema "New Delhi (India) Buildings":

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Shukla, Ashish, G. N. Tiwari und M. S. Sodha. „Techno-Economic Analysis of an Earth-Air Heat Exchanger for Cooling and Heating of a Building“. In ASME 2005 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. ASMEDC, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2005-82737.

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In this communication a quasi-steady state mathematical model is developed to predict the air temperature at the outlet of an earth-air heat exchanger and seasonal heating and cooling potential, associated with the use of the exchanger. Seasonal values of heating and cooling potential are estimated theoretically and validated by experiments in two distinct seasons, i.e. winter and summer, corresponding to composite climate of New Delhi (28° 35′ N, 77° 12′ E) India. It is observed that there is significant saving of energy and money by reducing cooling and heating loads on air-conditioners, if earth air heat exchanger is used. There is fair agreement between theoretical values and experimentally observed values of the seasonal values of heating and cooling potentials for each season (i.e. winter and summer).
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Dikshit, H. P., und C. A. Micchelli. „ADVANCES IN COMPUTATIONAL MATHEMATICS: NEW DELHI, INDIA“. In Proceedings of the Conference. WORLD SCIENTIFIC, 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789814534796.

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3

Tandon, Mahes, und Sarvagya Srivastava. „New Generation of Footbridges for Delhi, India“. In Footbridge 2017 Berlin. Chair of Conceptual and Structural Design, Fachgebiet Entwerfen und Konstruieren – Massivbau, Technische Universität Berlin, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.24904/footbridge2017.09516.

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4

Talluri, Aishwarya. „Spatial planning and design for food security. Building Positive Rural-urban Linkages“. In 55th ISOCARP World Planning Congress, Beyond Metropolis, Jakarta-Bogor, Indonesia. ISOCARP, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/rymx6371.

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Food is vital for human survival. Food has had a significant impact on our built environment since the beginning of human life. The process of feeding oneself was most people’s primary job for the greater part of human history. Urban Migration moved people away from rural and natural landscapes on which they had been dependent for food and other amenities for centuries.1 Emergence of the cities leads to a new paradigm where the consumers get their food from rural hinterland where the main production of food products happens2 . In a globalized world with an unprecedented on-going process of urbanization, There is an ever reducing clarity between urban and rural, the paper argues that the category of the urban & rural as a spatial and morphological descriptor has to be reformulated, calling for refreshing, innovating and formulating the way in which urban and rural resource flows happen. India is projected to be more than 50% urban by 2050 (currently 29%). The next phase of economic and social development will be focused on urbanization of its rural areas. This 50 %, which will impact millions of people, will not come from cities, but from the growth of rural towns and small cities. Urbanization is accelerated through Government schemes such as JNNURM (Jawaharlal Nehru National Urban Renewal Mission ) , PMAY (Pradhan Mantri Awas Yojana), 100 smart cities challenge, Rurban Mission are formulated with developmental mindset. The current notions of ‘development’ are increasing travel distances, fuels consumption, food imports, deterioration of biodiversity, pollution, temperatures, cost of living. The enormity of the issue is realized when the cumulative effect of all cities is addressed. Urban biased development becomes an ignorant choice, causing the death of rural and deterioration of ecological assets. Most people live in places that are distant from production fields have been observed as an increasing trend. Physical separation of people from food production has resulted in a degree of indifference about where and how food is produced, making food a de-contextualized market product as said by Halweil, 20023 . The resulting Psychological separation of people from the food supply and the impacts this may have on long term sustainability of food systems. Methodology : . Sharing the learning about planning for food security through Field surveys, secondary and tertiary sources. Based on the study following parameters : 1. Regional system of water 2. Landforms 3. Soil type 4. Transportation networks 5. Historical evolution 6. Urban influences A case study of Delhi, India, as a site to study a scenario that can be an alternative development model for the peri-urban regions of the city. To use the understanding of spatial development and planning to formulate guidelines for sustainable development of a region that would foster food security.
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Schlaich, Mike, und Uwe Burkhardt. „Bridge Design for India - from Kolkata to New Delhi“. In IABSE Conference, Kuala Lumpur 2018: Engineering the Developing World. Zurich, Switzerland: International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineering (IABSE), 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2749/kualalumpur.2018.0039.

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<p>This paper is about cable-stayed bridges built in India during the last forty years. The common ground for these bridges not only is their location and that most are made with composite decks, also their stories touch many of the themes of this conference. They are large scale infrastructure projects in a rapidly developing country where old and new need to learn to coexist at a fast pace and they certainly illustrate the issue of aesthetic design.</p><p>Several cable-stayed bridges from the author´s office and the issue of composite decks for this bridge type serve as examples to illustrate how bridge design has evolved in India from the 1970s until today.</p>
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Raghucharan, M. C., und Surendra Nadh Somala. „Generating Site-Specific Ground Motions for Delhi Region for Seismic Vulnerability Assessment of Buildings—Promoting Disaster Resilient Communities“. In ASCE India Conference 2017. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/9780784482032.030.

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Agarwal, R., und A. Upadhyay. „Structural assessment of Alai Darwaza: an Indo-Islamic monument in the Qutb Complex, Delhi, India“. In REHAB 2014 - International Conference on Preservation, Maintenance and Rehabilitation of Historical Buildings and Structures. Green Lines Institute for Sustainable Development, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.14575/gl/rehab2014/089.

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Pandey, Alok K., Ram P. Kumar und Krishan Kumar. „Satellite and ground based seasonal variability of NO2and SO2over New Delhi, India“. In SPIE Remote Sensing, herausgegeben von Adolfo Comerón, Evgueni I. Kassianov und Klaus Schäfer. SPIE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2193542.

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Mittal, Atul K., Mehul Jain, Priyanka Jamwal und J. M. Mouchel. „Treatment of Urban Run Off Using Constructed Wetlands in New Delhi, India“. In World Environmental and Water Resources Congress 2006. Reston, VA: American Society of Civil Engineers, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1061/40856(200)356.

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Gera, Krity, und Peter Hasdell. „The context and experience of mobility among urban marginalized women in New Delhi, India“. In Design Research Society Conference 2020. Design Research Society, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.21606/drs.2020.161.

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Berichte der Organisationen zum Thema "New Delhi (India) Buildings":

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Challenger, K. D. International Conference on Fracture (6th) Held at New Delhi (India) on December 1984. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, Februar 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada152456.

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2

Crowe, Tracey. Public-Private roundtables at the fourth Clean Energy Ministerial, 17-18 April 2013, New Delhi, India. Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI), Juni 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.2172/1087113.

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Sexual coercion: Young men's experiences as victims and perpetrators. Population Council, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/pgy22.1008.

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Available evidence suggests that a considerable number of young people experience nonconsensual sex across the world, however research has mainly concentrated on the experiences of young girls and their perspectives of perpetrators of violence. Little is known about coercion among young males as victims or perpetrators. Case studies presented at an international consultative meeting in September 2003 in New Delhi, India, challenged the common assumption that only women are victims of violence, and shed light on the experiences of young males as victims of sexual coercion. These case studies also discussed the perspectives of young males as perpetrators of violence against young women. The evidence comes from small-scale studies from Goa, India; Ibadan, Nigeria; Leon, Nicaragua; Mexico City, Mexico; Phnom Penh, Cambodia, and selected settings in Peru and South Africa. The findings therefore are instructive but not representative. Common themes drawn from these diverse studies and key issues are discussed in this brief.
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Forced sexual relations among married young women in developing countries. Population Council, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.31899/pgy22.1007.

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Recent research in developing countries suggests that a considerable number of young women may experience forced sex within marriage, but most women may be inhibited from reporting these experiences due to shame, fear of reprisal, or deep-rooted unequal gender norms. In September 2003, a global consultative meeting on nonconsensual sex among young people in developing countries was held in New Delhi, India. The meeting was organized by the Population Council in collaboration with World Health Organization/Department of Reproductive Health and Research, and Family Health International/YouthNet. Participants included researchers, legal analysts, representatives from community-based NGOs, policy-makers, and young people themselves. Papers highlighting the nature and prevalence of coercion among married young women were presented. Sessions examined the following issues in relation to nonconsensual sex: experiences of young females and males: prevalence, forms, and contexts; youth perspectives; patterns of transactional sex; roles of the legal system; outcomes of coercion at the individual and community level; interventions to prevent nonconsensual sex and to support and treat victims; and research design and methods. Several recommendations for action to address factors that heighten young women’s vulnerability to coercive sexual relationships within marriage were presented.

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