exhibition hall
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Author(s):  
Han Chen

In order to improve the lighting effect of the museum exhibition hall, clearly express the exhibition content of the museum exhibition hall, a lighting design method of museum exhibition hall based on Internet of Things and deep learning is proposed. According to the characteristics and functions of light sources and lamps, select appropriate light sources and lamps, and establish a convolutional neural network to evaluate the performance of lighting characteristic network model through computing accuracy, precision, recall and F1 score. Because the illumination of museum exhibition hall cannot be too high, the light projection method is designed to realize the lighting design of museum exhibition hall from two aspects: lighting mode and lighting characteristics, environmental lighting and light source form. The experimental results show that the lighting design method of the museum exhibition hall based on the Internet of Things and deep learning can achieve more than 70%, which has a good lighting effect and can clearly express the display content of the museum exhibition hall.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (6) ◽  
pp. 11-13
Author(s):  
Yuxian Bai ◽  
Junjie Fan ◽  
Xuan Luo ◽  
Qingbo liu

With the support of Geely college, this study aims to solve the problem that teachers and students’ works cannot be displayed under special circumstances. Using this set of applications breaks through many conditions such as time and region, shows learning style to teachers and students and the outside world, and provides a way for knowledge dissemination and sharing.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 806
Author(s):  
Zhanzhi Wan ◽  
Tiejun Zhou ◽  
Zhili Tang ◽  
Yin Pan ◽  
Lingfei Zhang

The reasonable placement of evacuation signage is an important means to improve the efficiency of evacuation in the exhibition halls of exhibition buildings. The booths in exhibition halls are arranged and changed frequently for different exhibitions, which means that the evacuation paths are not fixed. Most people are also unfamiliar with the exhibition hall environment. In case of fire, earthquake, or other emergencies, people need to quickly escape to the safety exit, adhering to the guidance of evacuation signage. Existing evacuation signs are located according to the standards and the experience of the designers, and the locations of the signs are fixed and do not change with the changes in the booth layout, which means that the signage can be easily obscured by the booths, affecting the signage identification. Based on the visibility of evacuation signage, a smart design method of evacuation signage layout is proposed in this paper that can be adapted to different forms of booth arrangements in exhibition halls. This method establishes a key goal of achieving the full coverage of the visibility range of evacuation passages with the minimum number of evacuation signs. In the context of the actual visibility range of evacuation signage being blocked by booths in a three-dimensional space, this method finds the optimal number and best locations of evacuation signs by using a genetic algorithm. Finally, a case is given to verify the effectiveness of the method. This smart design for evacuation signage layout can enhance the guidance ability of evacuation signage in exhibition halls and improve the efficiency of evacuation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (21) ◽  
pp. 11622
Author(s):  
Yufen Zhang ◽  
Hongfan Bu ◽  
Shengxi Cao ◽  
Xiongfei Zhao

This study aims to verify which the performance-based design was successfully applied in the construction of the main exhibition hall of the first Hebei Garden Expo, China. Based on the idea of “equality and connectivity” among humans, buildings, and the environment, the exhibition hall was designed using digital shape generation technology, and a special double-skin structure was selected. A bright exterior glass curtain wall separated from the cell-shaped reinforced concrete (RC) structure, not only made the exhibition hall fit into the scenery so well, but also presented an adhesion area with functional links to the RC structure. Joints of the steel tubular truss and the glass curtain wall were optimally designed by means of finite element simulations. During the service of more than a decade, extension of space, function of interactivity, and energy conservation required for a green infrastructure were achieved, highlighting the ecological connectivity of the exhibition hall with the surrounding landscape. The exhibition hall performed synergy of structure and architecture functions and it is still a landmark building in Shijiazhuang, showing an excellent application achievement of the performance-based design.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (15) ◽  
pp. 113-135
Author(s):  
Semra KILIÇ KARATAY

Weaving is an example of art produced at the end of human need. The samples produced because they were needed first turned into art. It is not known exactly whether the art of weaving started as a carpet or as examples of plain weaving, rug weaving. Throughout history, carpet and rug weaving has developed in connection with each other. Rug weaving samples, which have an important place in Turkish culture, are accepted as source information about the period they were woven and the geography they were woven. Looking at kilim weaving examples, patterns are given with threads of different colors and different weaving techniques are used. Unlike carpet weaving, there is no pile height in weaving. The motifs used in the patterns are generally traditional motifs. Geometric motifs are used more frequently. In rug weaving, unlike carpet weaving, the threads are mostly twisted. Rug weaving samples found in the inventory records in the Niğde museum show that the rug weaving tradition is as old as carpet weaving in Niğde and its surroundings. The aim of this study is to share the information obtained as a written source on the general condition, pattern and color composition properties of the weaving samples in the exhibition hall and warehouse in the museum.


Author(s):  
X. Zhang ◽  
P. Dai ◽  
Z. Zhao

Abstract. The indoor micro-environment monitoring system of the Forbidden City aims to explore the thresholds of environmental indicators under the presence of coexistence of multiple cultural relics through the analysis of environmental monitoring data and the deterioration of cultural heritiges, and to develop the optimal strategies for the protection and utilization of cultural heritiges. The objects of interest include historic buildings with modernised interior or those used for the storage of movable cultural relics. Several environmental indicators are employed to quantify the dynamic changes of the indoor environment. In order to meet the requirements of 24-hour data collection, real-time data transmission, and easy management and maintenance, the indoor micro-environmental monitoring system has been continuously upgraded and the "LoRa-based Hybrid Self-Organising Network System Deployment Solution" was deployed to satisfy the demands of high precision, low energy consumption, constant stability, and low cost. Taking the Meridian Gate exhibition hall of the Forbidden City during the exhibition "Splendor Forever: Six Centuries of the Forbidden City" as an example, we discussed the relationship between temperature, humidity, carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations and visitor volumes, and the results provide a basis for optimizing the management of the exhibition. Future improvements to the indoor environment monitoring should focus on strengthening the in-depth mining of data and multi-factor correlation analysis, so as to gradually form a systematic and comprehensive monitoring management system.


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