scholarly journals GEDUNG SENI DAN BUDAYA BANYUMAS DENGAN PENDEKATAN LOKALITAS DI PURWOKERTO

Arsitektura ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Kirana Wahyu Kinanti ◽  
Titis Srimuda Pitana ◽  
Sri Yuliani

<p><em>Design and planningof Banyumas art and cultural building are based on the need of  art and cultural facility in Banyumas Regency. There have been  many art andcultural facilities in Banyumas, but no one are spesifically design for art and cultural activity. Because of these reason, those cultural faciliies can not be used  efisienly. Art and cultural building, whichis located in Purwokerto City,also needs to have a touch of Banyumas Cultural nuance as part of its integrated design. The goal of Art and Cultural Building designing and planing is get an Art and Cultural Building with Banyumasn Nuance by using Locality Prespective as an Approach. This locality prespective will be used along the design and planing and can be seen at groundplan, siteplan, massing, Landscape, and structure.  The result is a design of art and cultural building with many facilities such as artist and cultural observer secretariat,  auditorium, galery, amphitheatre, pendhapa, office building, and mousque.</em><em></em></p><p><strong><em>Keywords: </em></strong><em>Art centre, </em><em>Culture</em><em>, Defined Cultural of Banyumas, Locality</em></p>

2021 ◽  
Vol 907 (1) ◽  
pp. 012013
Author(s):  
Dian Fitria

Abstract Currently, climate change and wellbeing provoke buildings to have higher sustainable performance. So, the condition expects that buildings can tackle those issues that benefit and less impact the environment and its occupants. This particular target needs integrated design approach that the role of the iterative process is necessary. The study focuses on the process of facade design for the buildings that are targeted to have sustainable performance. So, the design of the building facades shall be in accordance with the green building standard issued by GBC Indonesia, Greenship NB Version 1.2. The optimization of facade design was conducted based on three parameters: OTTV, daylight, and outside view. The minimum requirements for each parameter are 35 Watts/sqm for maximum OTTV, 30% for a minimum active area covered by daylight, and 75% for a minimum active area with an outside view. One of the aims of this study is to give a depiction of how to conduct a design process by using an iterative way. In addition, it is to identify the critical keys in enabling the building to the requirements.


Author(s):  
J. N. Turner ◽  
D. N. Collins

A fire involving an electric service transformer and its cooling fluid, a mixture of PCBs and chlorinated benzenes, contaminated an office building with a fine soot. Chemical analysis showed PCDDs and PCDFs including the highly toxic tetra isomers. Guinea pigs were chosen as an experimental animal to test the soot's toxicity because of their sensitivity to these compounds, and the liver was examined because it is a target organ. The soot was suspended in 0.75% methyl cellulose and administered in a single dose by gavage at levels of 1,10,100, and 500mgm soot/kgm body weight. Each dose group was composed of 6 males and 6 females. Control groups included 12 (6 male, 6 female) animals fed activated carbon in methyl cellulose, 6 males fed methyl cellulose, and 16 males and 10 females untreated. The guinea pigs were sacrificed at 42 days by suffocation in CO2. Liver samples were immediately immersed and minced in 2% gluteraldehyde in cacadylate buffer at pH 7.4 and 4°C. After overnight fixation, samples were postfixed in 1% OsO4 in cacodylate for 1 hr at room temperature, embedded in epon, sectioned and stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate.


2011 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandrina Ritzmann ◽  
Annette Kluge ◽  
Vera Hagemann ◽  
Margot Tanner

Recurrent training of cabin crew should include theoretical and practical instruction on safety as well as crew resource management (CRM) issues. The endeavors of Swiss International Air Lines Ltd. and Swiss Aviation Training Ltd. to integrate CRM and safety aspects into a single training module were evaluated. The objective of the integration was to make CRM more tangible and ease acquisition of competencies and transfer of CRM training content to practice by showing its relevance in relation to safety tasks. It was of interest whether the integrated design would be mirrored in a more favorable perception by the trainees as measured with a questionnaire. Participants reacted more positively to the integrated training than to stand-alone CRM training, although the integrated training was judged as being slightly more difficult and less oriented toward instructional design principles. In a range of forced-choice questions, the majority of participants opted for an integrated training format because it was seen as livelier and more interesting and also more practically relevant. For the forthcoming training cycle, a better alignment of training with instructional principles and an even higher degree of training integration by using simulator scenarios are striven for.


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