Structure Methods and Anti-Seismic Mechanism of Palace Type Timber Frame System Building in Tang and Song Dynasty in China(I)

2014 ◽  
Vol 1065-1069 ◽  
pp. 2630-2633
Author(s):  
Ling Qiang Yang ◽  
Yan Wang

Gold box bucket bottom slot hall-type building is a kind of the highest rank traditional architecture in China. The main structure consist of frontal column layer, tile layer and roof layer, in which, the connection between stigma and cap block, stigma and column base are yaw floating shelves.

2014 ◽  
Vol 1065-1069 ◽  
pp. 2634-2637
Author(s):  
Yan Wang ◽  
Ling Qiang Yang

Gold box bucket bottom slot hall-type building is a kind of the highest rank traditional architecture in China. Under the horizontal inertia force, post partial pendulum and the weight of roof make it reset, as a result, it formed a phenomenon —it is on high level but does not fall (high tumbler). When stigma swing, then cap block move. When the friction was eliminated between flower arm and cap block, relative displacement occurs and we call it “soft neck role”. "The phenomenon of high tumbler" and "soft neck" .These two factors determine the excellent seismic performance of the lifted building


2020 ◽  
Vol 212 ◽  
pp. 110491 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andreea Dutu ◽  
Daniel Barbu-Mocanescu ◽  
Mihai Niste ◽  
Iulian Spatarelu ◽  
Yoshihiro Yamazaki ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 20-55
Author(s):  
Yuxi YI

This study investigated the relationship between “Chinese elegant ideology" and environmental mobilization to explore a new possibility of consciousness awakening for environmental protection. The author considered the life posture of scholar-emits in the Tang and Song Dynasties. It conveyed a demand for the inheritance of ideas and civilizations as well as elegant and sustainable life orientation. The study will further identify the ideological and spiritual guidance and practical demonstration of cultural ideology for environmental movements by considering the causes and influential factors of environmental mobilization in modern society. It is supposed to get a trade-off between natural integration and social integration. The given elegant life dynamics of the Tang and Song Dynasty will construct an interaction between nature and mainstream human social behavior, which dramatically reduces the segregation and contradiction between social and natural integration. This study will advocate a sustainable and contracted "new form" that appeals to human spirits by studying the selection of the scholar-emits in the Tang and Song dynasties.


2019 ◽  
Vol 111 ◽  
pp. 03068
Author(s):  
Mikkel Poulsen Rydborg ◽  
Michael Lauring ◽  
Camilla Brunsgaard

Climate change will affect the same climate zones relatively similarly. When considering how to design residential architecture for future climates it is therefore relevant to understand how residential architecture can adapt within the specific climate zone. Denmark is placed within the oceanic climate zone and shares many of the same problems that countries in similar climates do. However, the architectural responses have developed radically different. Denmark has been building heating efficient housing for the last decade, which have lately caused increased overheating problems and surging energy demands for cooling. This paper compares the architecture of different oceanic zones with Danish architecture. The strategies for adapting to climate change represents a broad variety. Western European tradition has itself created varied methods for coping with the climatic struggles their societies meet. Danish architecture has for centuries been focused on heavy robust constructions that would withstand the large amount of precipitation and wind that is predominant in the country. In Holland flood danger has been a constant threat to society, which has led both to defensive and reactive measures in the form of dykes and amphibious housing. On the other side of the globe, New Zealand’s traditional architecture has adapted to similar problems but with a much lighter construction, leading to architecture that is resilient to lateral forces like wind and earthquakes. While lacking the thermal properties of northern European houses the New Zealand homes show a remarkable flexibility and mobility through simple timber-frame constructions. The vulnerabilities in the Danish building stock is due to an unwillingness to invest in adaptive measures. It might be necessary to integrate a flexible building style to future sustainable housing and build up a different expectation for how a house is used. In the face of climate change, architecture need to be adapted to the problems apparent on the building site and draw on experiences from other cultures that might have faced similar problems in the past. Danish architects might likewise use the non-rocky ground for water retention through planting and landscaping strategies in relation to architecture.


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