Academic literature on the topic 'Bamboo Architecture'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bamboo Architecture"

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Silva, Fernando José, M. A. P. Rezende, White J. Santos, E. V. M. Carrasco, J. N. R. Mantilla, E. M. Piancastelli, and Aldo G. Magalhães. "Sustainable Architecture with Bamboo Columns Technology." Applied Mechanics and Materials 864 (April 2017): 318–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.864.318.

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Compositions with different pipe segments for constructing structural columns were investigated. In this article there is shown a column type composed of five parallel bamboo bars, connected by screws 16 mm and 13 mm in diameter. Compression tests instrumented with displacement transducers are associated with numerical modeling analysis to describe the column load capacity, from the general criteria of dimensioning. The chosen Bamboos are from the species Phyllostachys pubescens due to its favorable characteristics to produce structures and their common use in China, Brazil and other countries of temperate zones. In this proposal, the load capacity is considerably increased and lateral displacements are insignificant compared to the bamboo tested separately. More usual columns 3 and 4 meters long were modeled and presented the load limits of use for these types of structures. Other dimensions of columns can be calculated by the same system, presenting great design opportunities in the construction of the architecture and built spaces. This article shows a great advantage in using columns with bamboo bars compared to other materials used in the architecture, with guarantee and good indexes of security.
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Wang, Yifan, and Qing Chun. "BAMBOO CANOPY: TOWARDS A LIGHT CONSTRUCTION OF BAMBOO." Journal of Green Building 15, no. 3 (June 1, 2020): 215–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.3992/jgb.15.3.215.

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ABSTRACT Despite the abundance of highly sustainable bamboo, people tend to overlook its structural performance for construction purposes. This paper therefore explores the potential of bamboo architecture to develop light-weight building systems and also to create an effect of lightness. Developed by a team at the School of Architecture of Southeast University, Bamboo Canopy is an outdoor stage canopy in Anji, China, that pushes the boundaries of bamboo as a material for building woven gridshell structure. The work is designed as a long-lifespan bamboo structure, with the design team and locals participating in its construction. Positioned on a public stage, Bamboo Canopy experiments with the combination of sustainable construction and local craftsmanship to produce a highly engaging architectural intervention that activates the existing place. With its wing-like form, it invites visitors to join the performance scene—as they approach the shell, the structure reveals itself—with a 12.4-metre span and 6-metre roof overhang, the canopy covers more than 150 square metres with only 1.2 square metres touching the ground. Through analysing the form, structure and details of this experimental project, this paper clarifies not only the potentiality but also the feasibilities in using bamboo for light construction.
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dubrow, gail, Christina M. In Collaboration with Rockrise, Alyssa Gregory, and Sarah Pawlicki. "Practicing Architecture under the Bamboo Ceiling." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 80, no. 3 (September 1, 2021): 280–303. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jsah.2021.80.3.280.

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Iwahiko Tsumanuma (also known as Thomas S. Rockrise) was among the earliest immigrants from Japan to come to the United States to study architecture, and in the early twentieth century he established a successful practice, first in New York City and later in Asia. However, despite his training at Syracuse University in the conventional Beaux-Arts architectural vocabulary of the period, Tsumanuma found that the expectations of white patrons required that he design objects and spaces around Orientalist themes in the language of Japonisme. In Practicing Architecture under the Bamboo Ceiling: The Life and Work of Iwahiko Tsumanuma (Thomas S. Rockrise), 1878–1936, Gail Dubrow and collaborators Christina M. Rockrise, Alyssa Gregory, and Sarah Pawlicki make use of a previously unavailable archive of Tsumanuma's family papers to document the architect's life and career, presenting an in-depth case study of the multiple ways in which racism shaped the lives and experiences of Japanese immigrant architects in the United States in the early twentieth century. The methods used for this investigation, which included consulting family papers and collaborating with family descendants, provide a model for scholars seeking to better understand racism's formative role in shaping the history of the architectural profession.
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Fujinuma, Junichi, Matthew D. Potts, Abd Rahman Kassim, Rhett D. Harrison, Abd Razak O., and Takashi S. Kohyama. "Modular, hollow culms of rain-forest bamboos explain their persistence across a wide range of light environments." Journal of Tropical Ecology 34, no. 1 (January 2018): 1–16. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0266467418000032.

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Abstract:Tropical bamboos persist in a wide range of light conditions and quickly respond to changes in light availability. However, the mechanisms underpinning this ability remain unknown. In order to test the hypothesis that the modular and hollow culm architecture of bamboos explains their performance in a wide range of light environments, we determined the allometric relationships of two dominant bamboo species of the upper hill dipterocarp forests of Malaysia, Gigantochloa ligulata (n = 29) and Schizostachyum grande (n = 25), via destructive sampling. We also monitored biomass turnover of bamboos and woody trees in 24 permanent plots (1.92 ha in total) over a one-year period. Compared with woody trees, bamboo culms attained 1.5 times the height and their clumps supported four times as much total leaf area at the same above-ground biomass. In addition, at a given height, bamboo clumps had six times larger crown projection area than trees while having a similar amount of total leaf area per unit of crown projection area. Finally, bamboos’ biomass turnover rate was three times higher than trees, and G. ligulata increased its specific rate of biomass increase after canopy disturbance, while trees decreased. We conclude that the unique architecture of bamboos allows them to persist under closed forest canopy light conditions and to respond to gap formation via high biomass turnover rate.
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Habibi, Shahryar. "DESIGN CONCEPTS FOR THE INTEGRATION OF BAMBOO IN CONTEMPORARY VERNACULAR ARCHITECTURE." Journal of Green Building 14, no. 4 (September 2019): 223–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.3992/1943-4618.14.4.223.

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This paper discusses the development of design concepts for a row of typical bamboo houses, including the layout configuration and the function/aesthetics properties that are important from an architectural perspective. The purpose of this paper is to discuss the role of bamboo in investigations of structural and sustainability benefits and to highlight key research ideas that are important for industrialized production and cultural systems. The development of bamboo housing systems can advance efforts directed at securing home ownership for low-income families through lowering the construction costs to levels that are within their budgets. This paper aims to demonstrate approaches for using bamboo as a structural material for low-income and affordable housing. Bamboo housing can improve the financial stability and economic sustainability of low-income families. This paper presents a review of examples of vernacular architecture and building elements and then highlights the design of two bamboo-structure residential houses based on bio-climatic design strategies.
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Moreira, Luis Eustáquio, Fernando José da Silva, and Francisco Carlos Rodrigues. "Bamboo Mast for Lightweight Arquitecture." Key Engineering Materials 600 (March 2014): 3–9. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/kem.600.3.

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Bamboo is a pipe produced by solar energy. It is a plant of the graminae family which grows up all over tropical and part of subtropical regions of the world in more than 1250 species. High biomass production, high mechanical resistance, low specific weight and easy workability has done of bamboo a promise to future generations in relationship to sustainable construction systems. Bamboos of the Phyllostachys pubescens species are one of the most resistant and straight axis bamboos, used in China as material construction and other applications, as paper and fabrics. They are the most commercial bamboos of China and its forests covers 5,6 millions of hectare in that country. This exotic species is met on small plantations in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo states of Brazil. Many characteristics turns bamboo a smart structural element: high resistance/weight ratio; natural nodes spaced along the culm which avoids local buckling and graded distribution of the fibers from inner to outer side of the thickness wall. So, the application of bamboos as tensile structures supports is a coherent choice since these modern tents characterize a lightweight architecture. Some structural bamboos can attain even more than 15 meters long with 10 cm mean diameter. To increase the load capacity of this slender bar and make feasible bamboo use as masts for tensile structures, an hybrid mast using bamboo as axis and 4 steel cables along of was designed and tested in the Structural System Laboratory LASE, and Structures Experimental Analysis Laboratory LAEES, respectively. In this paper it will be presented the results of the mechanical tests for 2 different masts with 6 meters long. Both masts have the same design but important differences which will be discussed in the paper.
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Lapina, A. P., and N. I. Zakieva. "Bamboo in modern construction and architecture." IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering 1083, no. 1 (February 1, 2021): 012019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1757-899x/1083/1/012019.

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Ripper, Jose Luiz Mendes, Daniel Malaguti Campos, and Joao Victor Azevedo de Menezes Correia de Melo. "Textile-Architecture Structured on Bamboo Culms." Key Engineering Materials 517 (June 2012): 189–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/kem.517.189.

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This article aims to disclose the developments of a research on constructive methods of lightweight structures, developed by the Laboratory for Research on Living Design, LILD, from Pontifical Universidade Catolica do Rio de Janeiro, PUC-Rio. One of the objectives of this paper is, using principles of biomimesis, to systematize constructive processes by means of the understanding of how nature creates its forms. In the Laboratory, experiments with soap bubbles and catenaries have been serving this purpose In this case, studies resulted in the solution to the covering of the newly constructed LILDs building, located in the campus of the University, a textile-architecture where structural elements and joints, usually made of steel or wood, were replaced by bamboo culms tied together. The present article also demonstrates how these culms were benefited in order to meet specific requirements of the project.
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Bueno, Marcus Antonio Pereira, Fábio A. Moizés, Ivaldo D. Valarelli, Fernanda Christiane Rossetto Dinhane, Valter Roberto de Brito Celestino, and Rafael A. Pinholati Eugênio. "Particleboard with Inclusion Bi-Oriented Polypropylene Applied in Architecture." Applied Mechanics and Materials 858 (November 2016): 202–7. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/amm.858.202.

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This paper analyze the potentiality of using the BOPP (bi-oriented polypropylene), a byproduct of automotive battery labeling, in the bamboo particleboard production to be used in architecture projects. On this research, were studied both physical and mechanical properties according to the standards NBR 14810-3/2006 and ANSI A208.1/1999. The particleboards are produced in three traces: 75% bamboo and 25% BOPP, 50% bamboo and 50% BOPP and 100% bamboo. The adhesive used was polyurethane resin with a castor oil base, weighing 12% of the total mass of each panel. The physical properties of water absorption and thickness swelling, in both periods of 2 hours and 24 hours, demonstrated a direct relation with the amount of BOPP and impermeability of particleboards produced. Regarding the mechanical properties of bending and tensile strength, the addition of BOPP had an inverse relation to these properties.
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Tahmasebinia, Faham, Yuanchen Ma, Karl Joshua, Saleh Mohammad Ebrahimzadeh Sepasgozar, Yang Yu, Jike Li, Samad Sepasgozar, and Fernando Alonso Marroquin. "Sustainable Architecture Creating Arches Using a Bamboo Grid Shell Structure: Numerical Analysis and Design." Sustainability 13, no. 5 (March 1, 2021): 2598. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su13052598.

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Bamboo is known as a sustainable alternative for green building design, and it has been tied culturally to some regions around the world. However, bamboo’s structural strength for different design scenarios needs more investigation before it is widely adopted. Timber and bamboo have similar mechanical properties, but the latter is a repaid, renewable, sustainable, disaster-resilient system and is versatile, which has more advantages for construction purposes. Natural bamboo and its derivatives have been considered as a high-demand green and environmentally responsible alternative construction material, and this interest is increasing globally. Because of the rapid growth rate and large developing area, it is more useable than the limited timber resource. However, natural bamboo has an anisotropic and nonhomogeneous material property, which varies in multiple directions. There is limited engineering data and investigation of bamboo material and its use in and impact on construction. In this study, three different bamboo models were analyzed by Strand7; each of them had different features in structure and in the major construction material. A new model was proposed by improving the three given structures and was maximized in the mechanical capacity. Some design guidelines were proposed based on the analysis and comparison of different bamboo structures. The model will replace natural bamboo with bamboo scrimber, which is an engineered bamboo derivative that has more uniform material properties.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Bamboo Architecture"

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Oza, Nilay. "Puja Pandals : rethinking an urban bamboo structure." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/32341.

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Thesis (S.M.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 2000.
Includes bibliographical references (leaf 40).
Pandal's are large tent like structures that are recreations of popular buildings, usually temples, built in wood and cloth over a bamboo super-structure. Traditionally they are built for Durga Puja, a festival in the month of October in parts of Eastern India. Today these structures have become expressions of a broader popular culture where themes both religious and non-religious are played out. Building on research on Pandal's this study contends that, with certain modifications, bamboo could be used to construct cost-effective, large span, temporary structures in Urban South Asia. It is also contented that the abundance and availability of bamboo has, to an extent, worked against its intelligent use. Any degree of structural innovation is deemed unnecessary as it is not considered commensurate with its cheap availability. Here the material is valued for its qualities and is not premised on its obvious use and expendability.
by Nilay Oza.
S.M.
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Wong, Lucy Lai. "U.S. Bamboo house of the future : standardizing ecological living." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/35508.

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Thesis (M. Arch.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 2006.
Includes bibliographical references (leaves 82-85).
This thesis focuses on ecological living through the use of bamboo. It explores how the material can be used for methods of prefabricated housing design within the United States. It also uses a "ht of parts" and describes two examples that exemplify good use of bamboo. While bamboo is increasingly being used as a source of material in many applications, including elements such as flooring, decorative elements, and even semi conductors, it has not been used as a structural material in the United States, where most built projects are created using a wood frame structure. Bamboo has several advantages as a green machine that can positively influence our lives. Some of these advantages include its high strength to weight ratio which is comparable to that of steel and wood. Bamboo's short duration allows for renewable architecture to turn over more rapidly. New technologies have overcome previous problems such as the susceptibility to termite attacks and weaknesses in joint connections. This thesis intends to revise the idea of ecological living in the United States that integrates bamboo into housing construction. There are three main parts in this thesis: the first is to explore the aesthetics of bamboo structures. The second will take a look at the workings of joinery systems that appeal to the U.S. market. By synthesizing all my findings from the research literature, a city dwelling habitat would be designed through the use of a "kit of parts" innovation.
Lucy Wong.
M.Arch.
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Gonzalez, Cesar O. "The use of bamboo in architecture : case study : Old Caldas, Colombia." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1999. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape2/PQDD_0029/MQ64113.pdf.

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Liles, Stewart W. "Dynamically extending a networked virtual environment using Bamboo and the high level architecture." Thesis, Monterey, Calif. : Springfield, Va. : Naval Postgraduate School ; Available from National Technical Information Service, 1998. http://handle.dtic.mil/100.2/ADA354468.

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Thesis (M.S. in Modeling, Virtual Environments and Simulation (MOVES))--Naval Postgraduate School, September 1998.
Thesis advisor(s): Michael Zyda, Rudy Darken. "September 1998." Includes bibliographical references (p. 77). Also available online.
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Bentcheva, Yuliya D. "Modernizing the passing joint : a standardized building system to facilitate contemporary bamboo housing construction in regions of economic constraint." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/71282.

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Thesis (M. Arch.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, February 2012.
This electronic version was submitted by the student author. The certified thesis is available in the Institute Archives and Special Collections.
"02-2012." Cataloged from student submitted PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 85).
The thesis was inspired by the excellent mechanical properties of bamboo and its positive environmental effects. Despite its abundance and great qualities, the material has not been incorporated into the history of standard light frame wood construction and is therefore not used to its full potential, especially in regions of economic constraint in greatest need of housing structures. Can we design a light-frame construction system that allows for the non-standard nature of bamboo members and is inspired by the unique properties of the material? Can we reveal its contemporary uses and therefore allow for its cultural acceptance? The research investigates how a grid of members behaves as a system - incorporating imperfections and variations of individual elements. Along with the structural exploration, the work addresses the cultural misconception of bamboo as the "poor man's lumber" The exercises are aimed towards creating a housing unit that incorporates available materials into contemporary design elements.
by Yuliya D. Bentcheva.
M.Arch.
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Zhao, Tianming. "A Water Garden: Celebrating the Beauty of Nature." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 2019. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/92872.

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Nature, as the major consideration of the Organic Architecture of Frank Lloyd Wright, has constantly been favored as a path for a pure soul to communicate with the spiritual. Inspired by Wright's Organic Architecture and Traditional Chinese Garden, this thesis celebrates the beauty of Nature in Pandapas Pond, Giles County, VA, where a "Water Garden" is created on the open space defined by its water. Formally, the whole garden complex takes the inspiration from lotus flowers floating on the water, which could be thought of as an "organic system of architecture."
Master of Architecture
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Pereira, Vanessa Cristina Silvestre. "Sustentabilidade da arquitetura oriental." Master's thesis, Universidade de Lisboa, Faculdade de Arquitetura, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/13673.

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Dissertação de Mestrado Integrado em Arquitetura, com a especialização em Arquitetura, apresentada na Faculdade de Arquitetura da Universidade de Lisboa para obtenção do grau de Mestre.
Na era de grande progresso tecnológico em que vivemos e que assume um papel importante nas nossas vidas, torna-se quase impensável regressar às formas rudimentares de construir. A Arquitectura vernacular assume-se, aos olhos dos entusiastas do progresso, como um método retrógrado de criar habitação, que nos transporta a um passado nostálgico, carregado de elementos obsoletos. No entanto, esquecemo-nos de que estes métodos vernaculares são uma forma de combater problemas ambientais catastróficos que assolam o planeta, bem como de solucionar a actual crise habitacional e de carência económica; trata-se da forma mais simples de satisfazer as necessidades habitacionais mais básicas. Assim, tomemos como ponto de partida o bambú como material emergente e em abundância na China, onde já possui um grande passado histórico, para desenvolver o presente estudo. Apesar de ser um material quase esquecido, devido ao fraco desenvolvimento da tecnologia a ele associado, possui um carácter bastante ecológico, resistente e versátil, tratando-se da planta de mais rápido crescimento no planeta. Desde que há registo que tem sido aplicado nas mais diversas construções, com uma vasta aplicabilidade, do pavimento à estrutura. Com esta investigação procura-se, portanto, fazer uma aproximação entre Oriente e Ocidente, através do estudo de um material ecológico e de grande poder estético, capaz de se proliferar em ambientes diversos, já que cada vez mais procuramos alternativas e métodos de construção sustentáveis, com base em materiais que a Natureza nos disponibiliza, de forma a minimizar o impacto ambiental. Numa última parte, ao percebermos como o bambú é aplicado e de que forma pode ser melhorado para corresponder às exigências do contexto Europeu, mais concretamente de Portugal, o material recolhido culminará no desenvolvimento de um protótipo habitacional sustentável, que parte do bambú enquanto material base para a sua estruturação. Será interessante contornar as fraquezas do bambú face às características do clima mediterrânico de Portugal Continental, mediante a sua conjugação com outro material igualmente sustentável: a terra crua
ABSTRACT: In an era of great technological progress, which we live and plays an important role in our lives, it is almost unthinkable to return to the rudimentary forms of building. The vernacular architecture is assumed, in the eyes of progress enthusiasts, as a retrograde method of creating shelter, which leads us to a nostalgic past, loaded with obsolete elements. However, we forget that these vernacular methods are a way to fight catastrophic environmental problems facing the planet, and to solve the current housing crisis and economic hardship; it is the simplest way to meet the most basic housing needs. So, let us take bamboo as an emerging and abundant material in China as a starting point, where it already has a great historical past, to develop this study. Despite being an almost forgotten material, due to the weak development of the technology associated with it, it has a very eco-friendly, durable and versatile character, as it is the fastest growing plant on the planet. Since it is known, bamboo has been applied in several buildings, with a wide applicability, from the pavement till the structure. This investigation seeks to make a rapprochement between East and West, through the study of a material with an ecological and great aesthetic power, able to proliferate in many environments, as we increasingly seek for alternative and sustainable construction methods, based on materials available in nature, to minimize environmental impact. In a last part, when we realize how bamboo is used and how it can be improved to match the European context requirements, specifically in Portugal, the collected data will culminate in the development of a sustainable housing prototype, that takes bamboo as the material base for structuring. It will be interesting to contour the bamboo weaknesses, due to the characteristics of our Mediterranean climate of Continental Portugal, through the conjugation of it with an equally sustainable material: raw land.
N/A
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Noia, Paula Regina da Cruz. "Sustentabilidade socioambiental: desenvolvimento de sistemas construtivos em bambu no Vale do Ribeira, SP." Universidade de São Paulo, 2012. http://www.teses.usp.br/teses/disponiveis/16/16132/tde-04032013-095707/.

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O discurso corrente sobre termos como \"desenvolvimento sustentável\" e \"sustentabilidade\" tende a ser atribuído diretamente a uma matriz de pensamento \"verde\" que se desenvolve de maneira independente em relação à realidade social envolvida. No entanto, a manutenção de uma sociedade sustentável deve resgatar, sobretudo, o conceito de qualidade de vida das sociedades. Assim, configura-se a demanda de elaboração de possíveis formas de organizações sustentáveis baseadas nos valores históricos, culturais e nas relações existentes entre os cidadãos e a natureza. Diante das questões levantadas, a produção da arquitetura tende a sofrer uma reflexão sobre a postura que se mostraria mais coerente com tais preceitos. A busca por uma arquitetura de baixo impacto social e ambiental pode estar ligada a uma adequada articulação entre novas tecnologias e tradições construtivas existentes, conforme o conceito de pluralismo tecnológico. Diante do cenário social e ambiental do Vale do Ribeira, SP, mostra-se necessário o pensar em culturas construtivas que garantam o estreitamento de relações comunitárias, o envolvimento do usuário/produtor com o processo construtivo, a formação de uma mão-de-obra capacitada e a consequente autonomia das comunidades locais. O bambu representa uma cultura agrícola de fácil manutenção no ambiente natural do Vale do Ribeira, sendo já atualmente uma das principais regiões de seu cultivo no Estado de São Paulo. Configura-se como planta com grande potencial de regeneração ambiental e de grande rendimento produtivo. Já na elaboração do material para seu uso na construção, seu processo produtivo possibilita um amplo domínio pelo usuário, configurando um importante veículo de engajamento de projetos de inclusão social, possibilitando formação, capacitação e geração de trabalho e renda. Assim, a pesquisa visa elucidar e desenvolver possíveis sistemas construtivos em bambu que respondam às questões econômicas, ambientais e sociais referentes ao universo das comunidades caiçaras e ribeirinhas do Vale do Ribeira. A pesquisa, visando questões como o desenvolvimento de um processo de construção autônomo e a valorização do sujeito-autor de seu próprio espaço, contribui para uma forma de desenvolvimento contextual com raízes legítimas, integrado a um modo de vida e a uma cultura local, que só assim poderá trazer na incursão de novas tecnologias, uma atividade social e ambientalmente sustentável.
The current discourse about terms like \"sustainable development\" and \"sustainability\" is usually directly assigned to a \"green\" thinking, developed independently from the social reality involved. However, to maintain a sustainable society it is necessary to rescue the concept of quality of life of societies. Thus, there is a demand of developing possible ways of sustainable organizations, based on historical, cultural and in the relation between the citizens and nature. Before those questions, the production of architecture tends to be an object of observation to define which position would prove more coherence with such precepts. The demand for an architecture of low social and environmental impact can be connected to a proper articulation between new technologies and existing building traditions, as the concept of technological pluralism. Given the social and environmental scenario of the Vale do Ribeira, SP, it is necessary to think about constructive cultures that can guarantee a community relations approach, the involvement of the user / producer with the construction process, the formation of a manpower and the consequent empowerment of local communities. Bamboo is an easy to maintain agricultural culture in the natural environment in the Vale do Ribeira, one of the main regions of its cultivation in the State of São Paulo. It is a plant with great potential for environmental regeneration and high production yield. In material elaboration for construction, its production process enables a broad domain by the user, setting an important vehicle for engaging social inclusion projects, providing education, training, employment and income generation. The research aims to elucidate and develop possibilities for bamboo construction systems that responds to economic, environmental and social issues from the universe of regarding caiçaras and riverside communities in Vale do Ribeira. The research, aimed at issues such as the development of a autonomous building process and the appreciation of the subject-author of your own space, contributes to a contextual development with legitimate roots, integrated into local way of life and culture, which represents the only way of bringing in the incursion of new technologies, a social and environmentally sustainable.
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Fernandes, Ana Luisa Bela. "Arquitectura e desenvolvimento social.Intervenções de contingência.Desenvolvimento de proposta de habitação no âmbito do open source house design competition." Master's thesis, Faculdade de Arquitectura de Lisboa, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/2898.

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Tese de Mestrado em Arquitectura de Interiores
O objectivo deste estudo é o de desenvolver uma proposta de projecto de arquitectura para uma habitação que satisfaça as condições básicas humanas no âmbito do Concurso OS House – Open Source House Design Competition, segundo um pensamento sustentável. Procura-se perceber e propor uma arquitectura que possa responder de forma eficaz perante uma situação de grande carência socioeconómica e equacionar como a arquitectura poderá tornar-se uma ferramenta ágil e capaz de ajudar a resolver os problemas básicos da condição humana no domínio da habitação, de forma sustentável e com economia de recursos. Pretende-se assim, estudar como a arquitectura pode melhorar a qualidade de vida das pessoas quando estas são confrontadas com situações de precariedade. Procura-se avaliar as condições do local destinado a esta proposta - o Gana, e equacionar soluções de intervenção que minimizem a crise habitacional vivida neste país. O presente relatório de projecto final no contexto da arquitectura e desenvolvimento social, inicia-se com a participação no Concurso OS House – Open Source House Design Competition e incide no Caso de Estudo do Gana, partindo da análise das condições de vida da população pertencente à classe média emergente deste país no objectivo de elaborar uma proposta de habitação. Com este estudo, pretendem-se lançar contributos para um debate quanto à problemática da habitação e do respectivo projecto de arquitectura num contexto em vias de desenvolvimento. Parafraseando Cameron Sinclair, acredito que “onde os recursos e competência técnica forem escassos, o projecto inovador e sustentável pode fazer diferença na vida das pessoas” e contornar o problema social da habitação sentido em alguns países do mundo, bem como a crise habitacional que se sente actualmente no Gana.
The purpose of this study is to develop an architectural project proposal for a dwelling that meets the basic human conditions within the Contest OS House - Open Source House Design Competition, according to a sustainable concept. We seek to understand and propose an architecture that may effectively respond to a situation of high socio-economic deprivation, and consider how architecture can become a flexible tool to help solving basic problems of human condition in the field of housing, in a sustainable and resource-saving manner. Thus, the aim is to study how architecture can improve people’s quality of life whenever they confront precarious situations. We aim to assess the conditions of the site for this proposal - Ghana, considering intervention solutions that can minimize house living crisis in this country. This final Master Degree project, presenting a proposal for housing in the context of architecture and social development, begins by participating in the Contest OS House - Open Source House Design Competition, focuses on the Case Study of Ghana and is based on an analysis of living conditions of the population that belongs to the emerging middle class of the country. With this study, I intend to launch a contribution to a debate about issues of housing and its architectural design in the contingency context and economic fragility. To paraphrase Cameron Sinclair, we believe that “where resources and expertise are scarce, the innovative and sustainable design may make the difference in peoples lives”, and help to minimize the social housing problem in some countries in the world, as well as the housing crisis that actually affects Ghana.
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Mota, Rui Van Zeller de Klerk. "Arquitectura algoritmica aplicada à habitação em Port-au-Prince, Haiti. Um sistema de projecto." Master's thesis, Faculdade de Arquitetura de Lisboa, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10400.5/5804.

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Books on the topic "Bamboo Architecture"

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White, Anthony G. Bamboo architecture: A selected bibliography. Monticello, Ill., USA: Vance Bibliographies, 1990.

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Liu, K. W., Q. F. Xu, G. Wang, F. M. Chen, Y. B. Leng, J. Yang, and K. A. Harries. Contemporary Bamboo Architecture in China. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-8309-1.

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Osamu, Suzuki, ed. Bamboo fences. New York: Princeton Architectural Press, 2009.

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van, Trier Harry, and Maertens Hugo, eds. Bamboo: A material for landscape and garden design. Basel: Birkhäuser, 2006.

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1940-, Yoshikawa Isao, ed. Takegaki no dezain. Tōkyō: Gurafikkusha, 1988.

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Suzuki, Osamu. Takegaki no dezain. Tokyo: Graphic-sha Pub. Co., 1988.

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Suzuki, Osamu. Takegaki no dezain. Tōkyō: Gurafikkusha, 1988.

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Liles, Stewart W. Dynamically extending a networked virtual environment using Bamboo and the high level architecture. Monterey, Calif: Naval Postgraduate School, 1998.

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Robledo, Jorge Enrique. Un siglo de bahareque en el antiguo Caldas. Bogotá: El Ancora Editores, 1993.

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Universität für Angewandte Kunst Wien. Institut für Architektur, ed. Techo en Mexico: The Mexican roof revisited 2009. Wien: Springer, 2011.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bamboo Architecture"

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Liu, K. W., Q. F. Xu, G. Wang, F. M. Chen, Y. B. Leng, J. Yang, and K. A. Harries. "Distribution of Bamboo Forest Resources and Species for Construction." In Contemporary Bamboo Architecture in China, 1–5. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-8309-1_1.

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Liu, K. W., Q. F. Xu, G. Wang, F. M. Chen, Y. B. Leng, J. Yang, and K. A. Harries. "Research and Development Status of Different Types of Bamboo Structures." In Contemporary Bamboo Architecture in China, 31–57. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-8309-1_3.

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Liu, K. W., Q. F. Xu, G. Wang, F. M. Chen, Y. B. Leng, J. Yang, and K. A. Harries. "Case Studies." In Contemporary Bamboo Architecture in China, 79–260. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-8309-1_6.

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Liu, K. W., Q. F. Xu, G. Wang, F. M. Chen, Y. B. Leng, J. Yang, and K. A. Harries. "Types and Characteristics of Bamboo Materials for Construction Uses." In Contemporary Bamboo Architecture in China, 7–30. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-8309-1_2.

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Liu, K. W., Q. F. Xu, G. Wang, F. M. Chen, Y. B. Leng, J. Yang, and K. A. Harries. "Standards." In Contemporary Bamboo Architecture in China, 59–69. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-8309-1_4.

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Liu, K. W., Q. F. Xu, G. Wang, F. M. Chen, Y. B. Leng, J. Yang, and K. A. Harries. "Opportunities and Challenges for the Modern Bamboo Construction Industry in China." In Contemporary Bamboo Architecture in China, 261–69. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-8309-1_7.

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Liu, K. W., Q. F. Xu, G. Wang, F. M. Chen, Y. B. Leng, J. Yang, and K. A. Harries. "International Organizations, Research Institutions, and Production and Processing Enterprises in China." In Contemporary Bamboo Architecture in China, 71–78. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-16-8309-1_5.

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Liu, Yue, Yuan Yuan, and Shaodong Li. "Research status and prospect of architecture of bamboo." In Advances in Civil Engineering: Structural Seismic Resistance, Monitoring and Detection, 516–22. London: CRC Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1201/9781003310884-69.

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Husri, Zafuan, Mohd Sabrizaa Abd Rashid, Suzana Said, and Razali Kamisan. "Bamboo Modular System (BMS) for New Eco Architecture." In International Colloquium of Art and Design Education Research (i-CADER 2014), 525–39. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-287-332-3_54.

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Zea Escamilla, Edwin, Hector Archilla, Denamo Addissie Nuramo, and David Trujillo. "Bamboo: An Engineered Alternative for Buildings in the Global South." In Bioclimatic Architecture in Warm Climates, 397–414. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-12036-8_15.

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Conference papers on the topic "Bamboo Architecture"

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E. Hebel, Prof Dirk, Felix Heise, and Alireza Javadian. "Engineering Bamboo: The new composite Reinforcement." In Annual International Conference on Architecture and Civil Engineering. Global Science & Technology Forum (GSTF), 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.5176/2301-394x_ace13.26.

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Yuan, Mengting, and Xinqun Feng. "Application of Bamboo Material in Modern Architecture." In 5th International Conference on Civil Engineering and Transportation. Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/iccet-15.2015.355.

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Sun, Ke Nan, Tian Tian Lo, Xiangmin Guo, and Jinxuan Wu. "Digital Construction of Bamboo Architecture Based on Multi-Technology Cooperation: Constructing a New Parameterized Digital Construction Workflow of Bamboo Architecture From Traditional Bamboo Construction Technology." In CAADRIA 2022: Post-Carbon. CAADRIA, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.52842/conf.caadria.2022.2.223.

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Pal, Dr Manish, and Dipankar Sarkar. "Study of Young's Modulus of Laterite Soil-Bamboo Fibre Mix." In Annual International Conference on Architecture and Civil Engineering. Global Science & Technology Forum (GSTF), 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.5176/2301-394x_ace13.113.

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Aguilar Larrinaga, Roberto, Laia Haurie Ibarra, Ana Maria Lacasta Palacio, and Marc Tous Coll. "Bamboo Connection Technology for Lightweight Structures." In 4th International Conference on Bio-Based Building Materials. Switzerland: Trans Tech Publications Ltd, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4028/www.scientific.net/cta.1.872.

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Abstract:
Bamboo construction is often related to traditional and vernacular architecture, which is found mostly in rural areas, where, for the construction, local people apply diverse techniques learned in an empirical way and passed on from generation to generation. However, in the last years, many modern constructions with bamboo have been developed around the world. At the same time, many connections have been designed for permanent and ephemerals lightweight structures. However, most of them do not have standardization and mechanical testing, because it is expensive or there are no means to do it. Therefore, it is required to create a technology classification for the most used existing connections, starting with the traditional way to join canes until the contemporary connections developed with high technology. In this context, connections are a challenge to be developed, as currently there is no normative in bamboo to follow and create standardization.
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DELL AQUILA, ANNAMARIA, and ROBERTO CASTELLUCCIO. "The new frontier of green architecture Bamboo as building material." In Third International Conference on Advances In Civil, Structural and Environmental Engineering- ACSEE 2015. Institute of Research Engineers and Doctors, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.15224/978-1-63248-065-1-97.

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Song, Jialu, and Yanzuo Zhou. "Comprehensive Application of Bamboo Elements in Modern Interior Design." In Proceedings of the 2019 International Conference on Architecture: Heritage, Traditions and Innovations (AHTI 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/ahti-19.2019.76.

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Yihan Wang and Yuewen Cheng. "Bamboo charm reading new application of bamboo material to modern construction space from the architecture in Shanghai World Expo." In 2011 International Conference on Electric Technology and Civil Engineering (ICETCE). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/icetce.2011.5774537.

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Kim, Jungrae, Michael Sullivan, and Mattan Erez. "Bamboo ECC: Strong, safe, and flexible codes for reliable computer memory." In 2015 IEEE 21st International Symposium on High Performance Computer Architecture (HPCA). IEEE, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/hpca.2015.7056025.

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Qi, Yue, Ruqing Zhong, Benjamin Kaiser, Yasaman Tahouni, Hans-Jakob Wagner, Alexander Verl, and Achim Menges. "Augmented Accuracy - A human-machine integrated adaptive fabrication workflow for bamboo construction utilizing computer vision." In eCAADe 2021: Towards a New, Configurable Architecture. eCAADe, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2021.1.345.

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