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<title>Conference proceedings  in Architecture</title>
<link>http://103.99.128.19:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/117</link>
<description>Proceeding Published in Architecture</description>
<pubDate>Sun, 19 Apr 2026 10:37:14 GMT</pubDate>
<dc:date>2026-04-19T10:37:14Z</dc:date>
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<title>INTEGRATION OF PERFORMANCE BASED MODELING TECHNIQUES WITH BUILDING DESIGN METHOD (INDUSTRY/FACTORY) CONSIDERING ENERGY EFFICIENCY IN BANGLADESH</title>
<link>http://103.99.128.19:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/278</link>
<description>INTEGRATION OF PERFORMANCE BASED MODELING TECHNIQUES WITH BUILDING DESIGN METHOD (INDUSTRY/FACTORY) CONSIDERING ENERGY EFFICIENCY IN BANGLADESH
Chowdhury, Sajal; Alam, Dr. Md. Rabiul
Climate changing has been a debated issue during the last few years. Some institutes in different countries&#13;
have worked on this subject. Several future climate predictions have been generated. Each future climate is&#13;
based on some assumptions and consequently has some uncertainties. These uncertainties are dragged to the&#13;
building simulation results by using the climate data for assessing the future performance of buildings.&#13;
Bangladesh is newly a developing country. Many more construction is going on in full swing now days. This&#13;
rapid construction is changing our earth surface very quickly. So that it increases heat on earth surface,&#13;
energy consumption, decrease the comfort level. The answer to this challenging situation is the adoption of a&#13;
holistic design approach, whereby the different disciplines required is brought together and interacts since&#13;
the first steps of the design process. This study revealed the present implementation status of factory&#13;
building sector energy standards in Bangladesh, implications for sustainable energy efficient designs in&#13;
factory building and increasing demand for sustainable energy efficient industrial building
</description>
<pubDate>Tue, 11 Jan 2011 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2011-01-11T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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<item>
<title>Conserving Modern Architecture Issue</title>
<link>http://103.99.128.19:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/155</link>
<description>Conserving Modern Architecture Issue
Timothy P. Whalen
For the past few decades, our colleagues who advocated&#13;
for the preservation of great twentieth-century architecture have been successful.&#13;
They have not only saved important buildings—think the De La Warr&#13;
Pavilion in England or the Century Plaza Hotel in my hometown of Los&#13;
Angeles—but have also, in the process, raised public consciousness of their&#13;
significance and helped preserve the ideas of optimism, innovation, and progress&#13;
that they contain. These colleagues have my admiration and appreciation!&#13;
Still, despite these successes and a considerable amount of work on issues&#13;
facing practitioners, done early on by a number of key organizations, the&#13;
conservation field has lagged behind in the research necessary for the development&#13;
of best-practice solutions for the maintenance, repair, and renovation of&#13;
these structures. Working closely with international partners, our Conserving&#13;
Modern Architecture Initiative (CMAI) attempts to reinvigorate some of those&#13;
efforts that began in the 1990s. We seek to bring a strategic focus to these challenges through a program of research,&#13;
through the development and dissemination of knowledge intended to fill identified gaps in practice, and through&#13;
training and education efforts. This edition of Conservation Perspectives is a small piece of this effort.&#13;
The feature article in this edition is authored by Susan Macdonald, who not only is head of GCI Field Projects,&#13;
but also serves as the project director of the CMAI. In her article she notes the relatively recent emergence of myriad&#13;
organizations dedicated to saving and conserving modern heritage and delineates the challenges that lie ahead,&#13;
including achieving widespread recognition and support for the conservation of twentieth-century places, as well as&#13;
developing a common vision and approach to do so.&#13;
It is, in fact, the goal of the CMAI to address some of these challenges—and one of the ways in which the CMAI&#13;
seeks to do this is through model field projects, the first of which is our Eames House Conservation Project. Kyle&#13;
Normandin, who directs that project for the GCI, describes in an article of his own how the Institute is working with&#13;
the Charles and Ray Eames Preservation Foundation to assess the current condition of this iconic work of modern&#13;
residential architecture, and to assist in the development of a long-term conservation management plan for the house,&#13;
in the process demonstrating how existing conservation methods can be applied to modern cultural heritage sites.&#13;
Moving from the micro to the macro, Danilo Matoso Macedo and Sylvia Ficher in their article examine some of&#13;
the preservation issues connected to Brasilia, a city planned and constructed under the principles of modernism; the&#13;
article explores how today, over a half-century since its inception, Brasilia must grapple with preserving its founding&#13;
character while accommodating the tremendous growth that has followed its establishment. Growth and change&#13;
are inevitable, and Charles Birnbaum in his article on modern landscapes argues that preservation is more likely to&#13;
be successful when the public is engaged and when feasible alternatives to destruction are advanced. And in this&#13;
newsletter’s spirited dialogue, Catherine Croft, Hubert-Jan Henket, and Johannes Widodo bring differing perspectives&#13;
to questions of temporality and materiality in the quest to preserve the built heritage created in the Modern era.&#13;
I hope you enjoy this edition of the newsletter and find it valuable.
</description>
<pubDate>Sun, 01 Dec 2013 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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<dc:date>2013-12-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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