scholarly journals Alejandro de la Sota’s modern villages: vernacular abstraction and surrealist modernity

2019 ◽  
Vol 63 ◽  
pp. 01003
Author(s):  
Jean-François Lejeune

Asked to implement General Franco’s ambitious “hydro-social dream” of modernization of the countryside, Falangist planners, engineers, and architects of the Instituto Nacional de Colonización (I.N.C.) developed a national strategy of “interior colonization” that, along with the reclamation of extensive regions, included the construction of302 modern pueblos between 1944 and 1970. Alejandro de la Sota (1913–1996) was one of the first five architects of the I.N.C. He designed Gimenells (1943), which set up the standards for the 1940s, and thenfour innovative villages: Esquivel (1952), Entrerríos (1954), Valuengoand La Bazana (1956). Based on research within the archives of the Fundación Alejandro de la Sota and the Ministry of Agriculture, this paper summarizes the modernity of his pueblos: the separation of traffic, the propagandistic concept of the open plaza, the volumetric abstraction ofthe vernacular house, and his ironic use (as understood by Ortega yGasset) of the Spanish classical. The research emphasizes how de la Sota transcended the functionalist elements of modernity in order to mobilize memories of the real and produce a “surreal” reality. In so doing,he reversed the fundamental reference to the countryside thatcharacterized Spanish surrealism to bring surrealism within the processof Franquist rural modernization.

2021 ◽  
Vol 262 ◽  
pp. 03017
Author(s):  
Hadis Rakhaev ◽  
Anzor Gyatov ◽  
Zalina Ivanova ◽  
Elvira Kokova ◽  
Akhmat Chochaev

Communication and logistics are one of the most important features of the markets; they permeate and constitute its content. Communication and logistics for commodity producers are also as important attribute as production itself, and sometimes even more. For this reason, commodity producers themselves directly and explicitly, but more often through other institutions (including the government), tend to set up stable exclusive communication systems and logistics. This article analyzes the state of the prospects for the formation of communications and logistics networks for agricultural products. The correlation of existing communications and logistics of agricultural products and other types of products (including finished industrial products of various purposes: from machinery, equipment, chemical products to defense, hydrocarbon, carbon and other raw materials, timber and other goods) is analyzed. The established linkages are revealed. They were quantified, calibrated and classified. The existing principles (comparative and absolute advantages) are reviewed and new principles are formulated (marginal player, marginal linkages), which describe the real situation in the markets of agricultural products more correctly. New criteria for grouping and reformatting existing communication and logistics networks, which make it possible to increase the competitiveness of domestic agricultural products are proposed.


Author(s):  
David Krackhardt ◽  
Jeffrey R. Hanson

Many executives invest considerable resources in restructuring their companies, drawing and redrawing organizational charts only to be disappointed by the results. That’s because much of the real work of companies happens despite the formal organization. Often what needs attention is the informal organization, the networks of relationships that employees form across functions and divisions to accomplish tasks fast. These informal networks can cut through formal reporting procedures to jump start stalled initiatives and meet extraordinary deadlines. But informal networks can just as easily sabotage companies’ best laid plans by blocking communication and fomenting opposition to change unless managers know how to identify and direct them. Learning how to map these social links can help managers harness the real power in their companies and revamp their formal organizations to let the informal ones thrive. If the formal organization is the skeleton of a company, the informal is the central nervous system driving the collective thought processes, actions, and reactions of its business units. Designed to facilitate standard modes of production, the formal organization is set up to handle easily anticipated problems. But when unexpected problems arise, the informal organization kicks in. Its complex webs of social ties form every time colleagues communicate and solidify over time into surprisingly stable networks. Highly adaptive, informal networks move diagonally and elliptically, skipping entire functions to get work done. Managers often pride themselves on understanding how these networks operate. They will readily tell you who confers on technical matters and who discusses office politics over lunch. What’s startling is how often they are wrong. Although they may be able to diagram accurately the social links of the five or six people closest to them, their assumptions about employees outside their immediate circle are usually off the mark. Even the most psychologically shrewd managers lack critical information about how employees spend their days and how they feel about their peers. Managers simply can’t be everywhere at once, nor can they read people’s minds. So they’re left to draw conclusions based on superficial observations, without the tools to test their perceptions.


2014 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-38
Author(s):  
Silvanus Teneng Kiyang ◽  
Robert Van Zyl

Purpose – The purpose of this work is to assess the influence of ambient noise on the performance of wireless sensor networks (WSNs) empirically and, based on these findings, develop a mathematical tool to assist technicians to determine the maximum inter-node separation before deploying a new WSN. Design/methodology/approach – A WSN test platform is set up in an electromagnetically shielded environment (RF chamber) to accurately control and quantify the ambient noise level. The test platform is subsequently placed in an operational laboratory to record network performance in typical unshielded spaces. Results from the RF chamber and the real-life environments are analysed. Findings – A minimum signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) at which the network still functions was found to be of the order 30 dB. In the real-life scenarios (machines, telecommunications and computer laboratories), the measured SNR exceeded this minimum value by more than 20 dB. This is due to the low ambient industrial noise levels observed in the 2.4 GHz ISM band for typical environments found at academic institutions. It, therefore, suggests that WSNs are less prone to industrial interferences than anticipated. Originality/value – A predictive mathematical tool is developed that can be used by technicians to determine the maximum inter-node separation before the WSN is deployed. The tool yields reliable results and promises to save installation time.


Author(s):  
Aidong Meng ◽  
Sayed A. Nassar

A Digital Speckle Pattern Interferometry (DSPI) system is developed for the real-time measuring and monitoring the out-of-plane surface deformation around tightened threaded fasteners that are used to clamp bolted assemblies. Spatial phase shifting is employed to quantitatively determine the distribution of phase data by introducing a spatial carrier fringe pattern to the speckle interferogram. This is achieved by leading the object and reference beams to two separate apertures. The configuration is also suitable for collecting the real-time deformation during bolt tightening. The experimental DSPI system is set-up with optical components on a vibration-isolation table. A Matlab software is developed for the image acquisition and phase data calculation, which yields the out-of-plane surface deformation caused by the bolt preload. An aluminum joint is used with an M12 steel fastener. For miniature screw application, however, a plastic joint is used for collecting data.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (19) ◽  
pp. 5354
Author(s):  
Ingrid Martins Holmberg

This study puts urban heritage in the setting of property owners’ small-scale and resource-based management of ordinary old buildings. This phenomenon indicates a need not only to reconceptualize urban heritage in its actual complex web of negotiations over constraints of the regulation (urban planning, including preservation) and economy (the real estate market) but also to pay attention to the emergence of a new ethos. The case concerns a Swedish second-city context and the specific moment in time: When the 1990s recession had disarmed the real estate market. Based upon ethnographic fieldwork, this study used an assemblage perspective to allow for a following of entanglements of material and matter. The study sheds light upon the emergence of a small-scale and resource-based management in the midst of managerially defined cycles of investment. Important for the output was 1) the set-up of a network of skilled craftsmen, antiquarians, and entrepreneurs ‘of the right mindset that enabled for the authentic material result but that also helped navigate regulation and financial parties, 2) the “alternative market for reverential maintenance and repair” that guaranteed the appropriate supply of materials, products, and skills that differed from the mainstream construction market. For the means of understanding the ethos involved, the study introduced the notion of “factual life-span of buildings”. The overall aim of this article was to contribute to research on heritage urbanism by adding a resource management perspective that focusses on the entanglements of material and matter.


2010 ◽  
Vol 19 (05n06) ◽  
pp. 1064-1075
Author(s):  
ANDREAS THOMAS

Experiments with real photons have been performed for many years at the Mainz accelerator MAMI with different detectors. The upgraded MAMI C accelerator recently delivered electrons with an energy of 1604MeV. The A2 collaboration performs experiments with energy tagged polarised real photons produced via 'Bremsstrahlung'. Linear and circular photon polarisation is possible. In the years 2005/2006 the Crystal Ball detector with its unique detection capability for multi photon final states was set up in Mainz. The Crystal Ball at MAMI setup offers an excellent possibility to study decays of the η and η′ mesons. Due to the high intensity photon beam the apparatus can be seen as an η-factory. Recent results from the Crystal Ball experiment at MAMI are presented. In the future we plan to use a longitudinal and transverse polarised frozen spin target to investigate the spin polarisibilities of the nucleons.


1973 ◽  
Vol 13 (05) ◽  
pp. 259-266
Author(s):  
Henry B. Crichlow ◽  
Paul J. Root

Abstract A digital computer model of a radial gas reservoir was constructed to investigate the effect of completion techniques on gas well deliverability. The model was a standard r-z model divided linearly in the z-direction and logarithmically in the r-direction. Individual reservoir properties were assigned to each element of the model grid. These include porosity, radial and vertical permeability, and water saturation. A finite-difference approach was used to set up the flow equations, and both alternating direction implicit procedure (ADIP) and line successive overrelaxation (LSOR) were used to set up the system of simultaneous equations. The Thomas algorithm was used to solve the tridiagonal systems. From this research the following conclusions were drawn:(1)The real gas potential is effective in linearizing the gas flow equation. For nonturbulent flow the coefficient of performance in the backpressure equation, Q = C [ (Pe) - (Pw)]n can be evaluated independently oil the fluid properties of the gas.(2)Partially producing properties of the gas.(2)Partially producing intervals constitute a skin, the magnitude of which depends on the location of the perforations and the anisotropic nature of the medium.(3)In a damaged or stimulated well, within limits, the significant factor in deliverability reduction is the kind rather than the extent of the damage.(4)From the numerical standpoint ADIP is a more efficient method in "well-behaved" problemsthat is, in homogeneous systemswhereas LSOR is better suited to partially open and nonhomogeneous systems. Introduction Calculation of the flow rate and prediction of the deliverability of gas wells are factors of great economic importance to the natural gas industry. Consequently, the accurate analysis of gas flow in producing gas wells has been a subject of considerable interest, and many papers dealing with it may be found in the literature. One of the earliest methods for calculating gas flow, that of Jenkins and Aronofsky, involved the succession of steady states. Janicek and Katz, using a similar assumption that the rate of pressure change with time is independent of the radius at any given time, derived a set of relatively straightforward predictive equations. Other calculational methods are based on solutions to the partial differential equation describing gas flow in a porous medium. Until recently the analysis was based on linearizations that required evaluation of the gas properties at some average pressure. As a result, these solutions can be applied only when the flow gradients are small. Today gas reservoirs are being discovered at much greater depths and at relatively higher pressures. In many cases the formation permeability pressures. In many cases the formation permeability to gas is quite low. Thus, solutions to be linearized equation can lead to serious errors in predicting deliverability (and, hence, reserves) predicting deliverability (and, hence, reserves) because of the large drawdowns occurring in these systems. The simplifying assumptions implied by the linearized equations are not necessary when the real gas potential proposed by Al-Hussainy et al. is used. This function greatly facilitates the incorporation of the pressure-dependent variables, viscosity, and gas deviation factor into a mathematical model of gas flow. Its use reduces the unsteady-state flow equation directly to a form analogous to that of the diffusivity equation without the tacit assumptions that the pressure gradients within the flow system are small. Furthermore, the coefficients of the spatial derivatives no longer contain the pressure-dependent fluid properties. Because of these advantages the (p) function was used in this investigation of gas well deliverability. SPEJ P. 259


2014 ◽  
Vol 918 ◽  
pp. 252-257
Author(s):  
Jian Mei Song ◽  
Zhong Hua Yan ◽  
Hao Yuan

For a gas station training simulation system, the real time and reality of scene directly affect the application of system. In order to solve this problem, we used 3D virtual scene building technology based on OpenSceneGraph (OSG) to build gas station scene. Technology of levels of detail (LOD) was used to improve the real-time ability of the system during entity modeling. And then based on 3D entity model library and information files in Extensible Markup Language (XML), we built the parametric library and set up the gas station scene, which provided function information and attribute information. Experimental results show that the scene of virtual gas station can not only greatly improve the reality and immersion of system, but also well support the real-time simulation. Now, 3D virtual scene building technology based on OSG has applied successfully in gas station training simulation system, which provides feasible evidence for engineering simulation to solve practical problems.


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-63
Author(s):  
Helen X. H. Bao ◽  
◽  
Adam Brady ◽  
Ziyou Wang ◽  
◽  
...  

We use the reclassification of the real estate stocks in the S&P 500 from the Financials sector as a natural experiment to test the co-existence of both market force and behavioural biases. By performing event studies on real estate investment trusts (REITs) included in the S&P 400, S&P 500, and S&P 600 indices on both the announcement and implementation dates, we investigate the impact of the reclassification of the real estate stocks in the S&P 500 from the Financials sector to the newly created Real Estate sector under the Global Industry Classification Standard (GICS) system. We set up four hypotheses to test if the identified reclassification effect is due to improved pricing efficiency or bounded rationality. The event studies confirm the presence of abnormal returns during the announcement of the new sector and the S&P implementation. The reclassification effect is the largest for large-cap real estate stocks that are included in the S&P 500 index. These abnormal returns are robust to various measures of statistical significance and variation of event windows. The creation of a real estate category in the GICS improves the pricing efficiency of real estate stocks, but also triggers framing effects among investors. The market is under the influence of both rational and irrational forces.


2015 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 80
Author(s):  
Vilma Spahiu

The Integration of Albania in the European Union Structures remains one of the most important challenges of the Albanian government, since the post-communist period. To become a member of these structures with full rights, the Albanian government must fulfil some conditions and criteria. The main purpose of this paper relates to the analysis of the war against organized crime, as one of the fundamental conditions for the European Integration. The war against organized crime has been chosen as the most important focus because the defined criteria in this matter, regardless the efforts to improve the situation, have not yet given the desired results. Furthermore, it is important to emphasize the fact that lately the representatives of European Union increasingly are underlying in their statements that Albanian governments must document reliable data, regarding the war against organized crime, and they must document sustainability in this direction and give concrete results, because still in the security sector the proper objectives have not been reached. The real issue is not related with the missing of a national strategy in the war against the organized crime, but with the effective implementation and application of this strategy.


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