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Full-Text Articles in Architecture
Tallahassee Central City Planning Study, Tallahassee-Leon County Planning Department
Tallahassee Central City Planning Study, Tallahassee-Leon County Planning Department
City and Regional Planning -- Florida
Study on Developing Downtown Tallahassee
Infrastructural Urbanism: Hybridizing Our Networks, Hannah Boyd
Infrastructural Urbanism: Hybridizing Our Networks, Hannah Boyd
KSU Journey Honors College Capstones and Theses
“The story of people can be told through our infrastructure. In the rise and fall of cities throughout history, the places best positioned for a thriving future have always been those that offer systems to create the lives that we want. And we can see that as the innovations of canals, aqueducts, railroads, and highways did in their time, the kind of infrastructure that we build today matters to our success. If we do it right, it will forever transform our way of life.”
– Ryan Gravel1
Urban edges are created through interstices, spaces intervening between one thing and …
Infrastructural Urbanism: Hybridizing Our Networks, Hannah Boyd
Infrastructural Urbanism: Hybridizing Our Networks, Hannah Boyd
Bachelor of Architecture Theses - 5th Year
“The story of people can be told through our infrastructure. In the rise and fall of cities throughout history, the places best positioned for a thriving future have always been those that offer systems to create the lives that we want. And we can see that as the innovations of canals, aqueducts, railroads, and highways did in their time, the kind of infrastructure that we build today matters to our success. If we do it right, it will forever transform our way of life.”
– Ryan Gravel1
Urban edges are created through interstices, spaces intervening between one thing and …
Feasibility Of Rainwater Catchment In The Taos Mesa Community In Northern New Mexico, Miranda Rivera
Feasibility Of Rainwater Catchment In The Taos Mesa Community In Northern New Mexico, Miranda Rivera
Water Resources Professional Project Reports
INTRODUCTION Lack of water is nothing new for New Mexico’s general population. However, its immediate negative effects are unevenly distributed throughout the state, which is increasingly evident in the context of rising temperatures and decreases in precipitation. Access to clean drinking water is significantly more pressing in rural and off-the-grid communities than in metropolitan areas of New Mexico. On the Taos Mesa in northern New Mexico, these off-the-grid communities continue hauling as the only available method for accessing water today. In these communities, water is not only a vital source of livelihood but also necessary for the continuance of cultural …