Publikační činnost Katedry architektury / Publications of Department of Architecture (226)
Permanent URI for this collectionhttp://hdl.handle.net/10084/106716
Kolekce obsahuje bibliografické záznamy publikační činnosti (článků) akademických pracovníků Katedry architektury (226) v časopisech registrovaných ve Web of Science od roku 2003 po současnost.
Do kolekce jsou zařazeny:
a) publikace, u nichž je v originálních dokumentech jako působiště autora (adresa) uvedena Vysoká škola báňská-Technická univerzita Ostrava (VŠB-TUO),
b) publikace, u nichž v originálních dokumentech není v adrese VŠB-TUO uvedena, ale autoři prokazatelně v době jejich zpracování a uveřejnění působili na VŠB-TUO.
Bibliografické záznamy byly původně vytvořeny v kolekci
Publikační činnost akademických pracovníků VŠB-TUO, která sleduje publikování akademických pracovníků od roku 1990.
Browse
Recent Submissions
Item type: Item , From housing estate to city? Karviná and the plans for a new centre in the Karviná-Hranice housing estate post-1989(ÚSTARCH SAV, 2023) Špačková, EvaThe city of Karviná is an example of the process in which the meaning of a settlement changes over time, from economic and social ascent to a decreasing attraction. City development is continuously influenced by individual interventions, both planned and accidental, which can estimate and predict future developments only to a limited extent. We can observe in detail one example of a shopping centre development in the Karviná-Hranice housing estate. Examination of the plans, individual steps and their implementation over the years allows for description and assessment of how the plans met reality and changed both at individual moments and over a longer period of time.Item type: Item , Research into the influence of subsoil on sulphates, nitrates and chlorides accumulated in renovation plasters used for rehabilitation of monuments in the Czech Republic(Elsevier, 2021) Peřinková, Martina; Dlábiková, Ivona; Pospíšil, Pavel; Bílek, VlastimilDegradation of historical masonry and plasters is often caused by external conditions; the presented research focused on salts originating from subsoils. The content of salts: Sulphates, Nitrates and Chlorides was analysed from plasters on 5 chosen historic buildings before and after the renovation in this paper. The samples were collected three times between 1998-2018. In some cases, the Sulphates were still present or even with a higher content after the renovation in comparison with the state before renovation. That can be caused by many factors from environment and this work focused on source from the subsoil. To understand better geological background the borehole data around each object were studied. According boreholes were buildings divided in two groups: on clayey subsoil and building on subsoil without clay. By Kruskal-Wallis test was proved, that the Sulphates content in plasters was constant before and after the renovation on clayey subsoils, it didnt ' changed in a time. On subsoils without clay (mainly silty to sandy soils) the content of Sulphates declined after the renovation, what was proved by regression analyse on 95% confidence level.Item type: Item , Transportation factors in the selected methods of sustainable development assessment tools(Trans Tech Publications, 2020) Kocurová, Petra; Faltejsek, Michal; Osika, RomanThe interests focus on the tools, used in the case of evaluating the sustainability in the mobility structures. In the present is sustainable development regular part of planning in every scale. According to growing development and innovations, it was necessary to ensure a sustainable framework of progress or traffic performance. Sustainable development goals were founded as a reaction to limited natural sources and also as a response to the human impact on nature. Evolution of those goals started with the environmental base and then had also been added social and economic aspects. A study wants to find sophisticated tools for the evaluation of sustainable development in urban structures. As was located, in Europe exist methods for assessment of sustainability (EIA, SEA, LCA, EF, ER, GP, CBA, CEA, MCDA, EA, SIA, SEIA, etc.). Although even their large amount, they are mostly based on just one section of SD. Other tools which are used, are methods for evaluation sustainability (BREEAM, CASBEE-UD, GBI, LEED, IGBC, SB tool, DGNB, etc.), where are also included other sections (environmental, economic, social). Assessment tools were described and preliminary compared in the context of the factors’ coverage.Item type: Item , The current funeral architecture as the heritage of the 20th century and its routing in the 21st century in the Czech Republic(Università di Bologna, Dipartimento di Architettura, 2017) Frolíková Palánová, Klára; Juračka, OndřejThe life of the dead is stored in the memory of the living." These words said Roman speaker, philosopher and writer Marcus Tullius Cicero two thousand years ago, but they are still up to date. The Christian doctrine later strengthen these words and they are embedded in sacral structures, which previously where used for the last farewell ceremonies, inter alia. Major changes came during the 19th Century in Czech Lands. The cremation is massively promoted for better hygiene and as the expression of human progress. Josephine reforms and the onset of secularization started the process of the transformation of the last farewell ceremonies ongoing during whole 20th Century in the Czechoslovakia and later the Czech Republic. Massive construction of crematories and funeral halls (without cremation), as well as the political program of the communist regime, supported contemporary popularity of secular ceremonies and cremation. These changes had a considerable influence to the formation and transformation of cemeteries and their position in urban structure.Item type: Item , Requirements for cremation architecture in contemporary secularized society(Università di Bologna, Dipartimento di Architettura, 2015) Palánová, Klára; Kovář, Jan; Babor, Tomáš; Dlábiková, Ivona; Juračka, OndřejBurials of the deceased were always part of life of each society and that remain forever In Middle European culture based mostly on Christian tradition, it was common place, till the end of 19th Century, for burials in a grave. On the beginning of 20s Century gradually began to apply also cremation. its supporters pointed on its hygienic superiority compared to classical disposal with deceased This led to established and gradual development of a new building type - the crematorium. Supporters also promote high quality farewell ceremonies and this resulted in quality burial and cemetery culture during whole 20s Century The aim is to approach this new building type to the professional public and specify organization and typology for promote high ethic, ceremony, aesthetic and respect.Item type: Item , Czech panelaks are disappearing, but the housing estates remain(ÚSTARCH SAV, 2012) Zarecor, Kimberly Elman; Špačková, EvaA common lament about the legacy of communism in Europe is the damage that it did to the built environment. Particular ire is directed at the concrete prefabricated housing blocks, known in Czech and Slovak as paneláks (structural panel buildings), groups of which were arranged in housing estates (sídliště in Czech and sídlisko in Slovak) to create the region’s characteristic postwar districts. Paneláks were not only signs of the increased production of new housing, but also indicated the acceleration of urbanization in the region as residents moved from rural areas to towns and cities for work. According to United Nations statistics, 75 percent of the Czech population lived in urban areas by 1980, compared to only 54 percent in 1950 . These new residents were the first inhabitants of the panelák housing estates, and many of them and their families remain there today.Item type: Item , Vize socialistického města na příkladu Nové Ostravy(ÚSTARCH SAV, 2016) Špačková, EvaItem type: Item , Soapstone as a locally used and limited sculptural material in remote area of Northern Moravia (Czech Republic)(Springer, 2015) Vavro, Martin; Gajda, Jakub; Přikryl, Richard; Siegl, PetrIn contrast to Nordic countries, talc-rich rocks (massive and schistose talc-bearing rocks—talcite, magnesite-talc schists, chlorite-talc schists, and/or chlorite-actinolite-talc schists often loosely classified as soapstone) represented practically an unknown natural building and sculptural stone in the Czech Republic. This extraordinary material was quarried and used in the only region of the Czech Republic where Sobotín amphibolite massif (Šumperk district, northern Moravia) outcrops. Metamorphosed basic igneous rocks contain small lenses of soapstone that were exploited in the past and used not only for refractory purposes but also as a construction and sculptural material.Occurrences of ‘Sobotín’ soapstone show distinct zone macrofabric marked by the occurrence of massive soapstone in the core that gradually changes to talc-dominant schists, later to actinolite/tremolite-rich schists and finally to chlorite schists at the contact with surrounding amphibolites. The most typical ‘Sobotín’ soapstone exhibits high density (up to 2,900 kg m−3), low water uptake (maximum 0.68 wt %), favorable dynamic elastic properties (P-wave velocity 5,340–5,840 m s−1, S-wave velocity 2,900–3,300 m s−1), and mechanical properties (tensile splitting strength 5.2–6.9 MPa, uniaxial compressive strength 17.5–24.1 MPa). ‘Sobotín’ soapstone is relatively resistant to weathering action although schistose varieties show typical delamination when exposed to frequent freeze/thaw cycling in harsh mountainous environment. Field survey of monuments, architectural and building artefacts made from ‘Sobotín’ soapstone contributed to our knowledge on duration of exploitation of ‘Sobotín’ soapstone that was for sure utilised from the second half of seventeen century till the beginning of the twenty century. The most characteristic feature of ‘Sobotín’ soapstone is its strict local use on the territory of about 20 villages surrounding previously exploited soapstone lenses.