National Repository of Grey Literature 113 records found  beginprevious31 - 40nextend  jump to record: Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Small apartments at Mojmírovo Square in Brno
Vykydalová, Simona ; Šubrt, Jan (referee) ; Dulenčín, Juraj (advisor)
The subject of the bachelor thesis is the preparation of project documentation for building permits and documentation for construction implementation. The thesis is based on an architectural study that was prepared in the course AG033 - Architectural Design Studio 3 in the summer semester of the 2nd year on the topic of residential buildings. The topic of the study and subsequently of this bachelor thesis is the design of a new polyfunctional building in Brno on Košinova street. There are 35 small flats of various sizes designed within the polyfunctional building. Another significant function of the building is student dormitories. There is a designed 100 student rooms, for a total of 200 students. A café for the public and a fitness centre for the public are designed on the ground floor of the building. There is one rentable room with its own sanitary acilities on the ground floor. The building has an underground basement with underground garages for the residents of the house, cellars and technical facilities of the building. The plot is located in the municipality of Brno in the cadastral area of Královo Pole on Košinova Street. Specifically, it is a plot with parcel numbers 956/1, 956/2, 956/3, 956/4, 962/1, 964, 965, 966, 967. The land is not significantly sloping, it is a flat area. The designed building is a corner building which relates to the surrounding existing development. On one side it is the Josef Chaloupka House of Services for blind people and on the other side it is the building of the elementary school Košinova. As part of the studio assignment AG033 in year 2, the requirement was to connect the new building to the existing parking house ABC Parking, the connection was made through the green roof on the 6th floor. The mass of the building is divided into three distinct blocks that recede in relation to each other. The highest corner block serves as a residential building. The following two smaller receding blocks function as student dormitories. The ground floor of the building is largely used for public use as a café or gym and in contrast to the mass on the 2nd floor, it is entirely receded into the inner area of the building. In terms of the overall appearance, an attempt was made to keep the appearance of the building as clean as possible. A simple window and door arrangement on the facade was chosen in combination with white facade color. The ground floor of the building is higher, set back from the upper floors and largely glazed. The facade color in this section is a darker gray used to distinguish and lighten the rest of the building. A walkable green roof is designed on all three masses. The lowest is used for students, the middle is used to connect to the parking structure, and the highest roof garden is accessible to the residents of the apartment building.
Low-rise apartments in Řečkovice
Čermáková, Markéta ; Šubrt, Jan (referee) ; Dulenčín, Juraj (advisor)
The subject of the bachelor thesis was the preparation of the design and the following preparation of the project documentation consisting of documentation for the building permit, documentation for the implementation of the construction and the design of the architectural detail on the topic: low-rise apartment buildings in the city of Brno in Řečkovice. The work is based on the result of the subject Ag032 Residential Buildings from the second year. The aim in working on the theme of the apartment building was to respect all the required regulations and standards, but also to create a comfortable living space that offers an open living area, with as much sunlight as possible and does not overlook secondary spaces such as corridors or stair areas. The proposed building is located in the higher part of the site near Družstevní Street and close to the kindergarten. The nearby area has a residential character consisting of four-storey apartment buildings, among which there are buildings of a smaller height with public service functions. The proposed construction of the apartment building is related in height to the surrounding buildings. It is designed as a detached four-storey dwelling house with a connection on the south side to a semi-private park (the main use serving the occupants of the proposed dwelling house), created by the 'L' shaped plan. Due to the sloping terrain, all entrances are located on the underground floor, to the parts above the terrain. On the southeast side is located the entrance to the garage, which is lighted by daylight, and on the northeast side is located the main entrance to the building. Due to the slope of the terrain, the first floor with living rooms uses the vegetated area in the direction of the courtyard, which is laid over the garages and forms a place for front gardens. Currently, there is a large amount of greenery on the site and the residents of the area wish to preserve the greenery, so my design is mainly concerned with working with the greenery and elevating it to another level, all in combination with the housing.
Apartment resort Velke Karlovice
Špačková, Adéla ; Šubrt, Jan (referee) ; Dulenčín, Juraj (advisor) ; Matějka, Libor (advisor)
The subject of the bachelor’s thesis is a reconstruction of apartment house and change of its functional utilisation to apartment resort. It is located on the outskirts of Velké Karlovice in CHKO Beskydy. Current object is in the form of two mutually-shifted blocks with slightly inclinated saddle roof. It is created from 3 above-ground floors. In the ground floor are garages and cellars, in second and third are located the apartments, more precisely 8 of them. The main idea of the project was to keep the original object and simplify its fundamental shape. Add and remove something. Proposed changes finishes the fourth floor with four other apartments. Newly the object contains 12 apartments. On the ground floor is cafe, wellness with sauna and inner pool, utility room and cellars. Apartments contain an open plan, one bathroom and one bedroom, every residential room has access to the outside - balcony or loggia. Perimeter walls are combination of original bricks and new ceramic brickwork Porotherm and it is newly insulated with mineral wool. Monolitic reinforced concrete ceiling constructions are original, as well as staircase. New wooden roof truss has been created because of extension of attic floor.
Embassy of the Czech Republic in Addis Ababa in Ethiopia for the Ministry of Health of the Czech Republic
Palata, Jiří ; Šubrt, Jan (referee) ; Dulenčín, Juraj (advisor) ; Kolář, Radim (advisor)
The aim of the bachelor thesis is a proposal of the Embassy of the Czech Republic in Addis Ababa in Ethiopia for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic. The theme of the Embassy is based on the assignment of the international student competition Inspireli from 2019, where the proposal was placed in the finals among the TOP 25 projects from around the world. The Embassy serves primarily for the diplomatic representation of the Czech Republic in this country. The mission of the Embassy is to represent the cultural level of the state and the traditions of Czech architecture. It will be a place where foreign countries can learn basic information about the history, culture and economy of the Czech Republic. The design took into account the local conditions and typology requirements of the Embassy. The protected area of the Embassy consists of three operationally separate buildings, namely the administrative building with the consular and visa department, the apartment building of the embassy staff and the ambassador's residence. In a separate part of the protected area, there are social flats of local forces, which are employees of the Embassy. This part is separated by a communication corridor, which serves as an entrance for local forces. The main entrance to the complex is located from the east and north from the public road. The entrance takes place through a double check-up at the gatehouse. The parking lot for diplomatic visitors and employees is located in the northern part of the complex or in the underground garage. Parking for regular visitors is located outside the complex. The large complex also provides space for rest, recreation and sports. The offices of the administrative building have east/west- facing orientation. The building has two floors and a basement with an underground garage. The habitable rooms of the apartment building and the ambassador's residence have south-facing orientation. The buildings have two floors and a bas
Apartment resort Velke Karlovice
Kiowský, Filip ; Šubrt, Jan (referee) ; Dulenčín, Juraj (advisor) ; Matějka, Libor (advisor)
The subject of this bachelor’s thesis is a reconstrucion and conversion of two apartment buildings from the second half of the 20th century. The work is based on an achitectural study in the subject AG035 – Architectural Studio 5. The proposed conversion is located in a popular town Velké Karlovice, local part Leskové, in Beskydy mountains. Objects stand in a steep valley of river Vsetínská Bečva, which is followed by a road from Vsetín to Žilina in Slovakia. Both objects share a common gable wall. They have three floors – 1st includes technical utilities, such as cellars, storages and garages. Above this are another two floors, both with two flats, which makes eight flats together. The current low roof truss doesn’t allow full-fledged use. The subject of this work is a design of new use as apartments for short-/long-term living. Therefore is proposed reconstruction of flats and realization of new ones in the attic. On the ground floor will be created a small café. Two new lifts provide easy access. Inner partitions will be built from aerated concrete. Steel sections in building’s envelope will be used to carry loads above new windows. Reconstructed buildings must respect local landscape character. Facades will be white and supplemented by anthracite grey components, including sheet metal roof. There are another two objects intended on the property. Their detailed design isn’t part of this project.
Apartments resort Velke Karlovice
Hašlíková, Adriana ; Šubrt, Jan (referee) ; Dulenčín, Juraj (advisor) ; Matějka, Libor (advisor)
The subject of the bachelor thesis is the preparation of project documentation for building permits and parts of documentation for the implementation of the building on the basis of an architectural study, which was prepared in the course AG035 - Architectural Design Studio 5 in the summer semester of the 3rd year on the topic of residential buildings. The subject of this study was the renovation of existing buildings and the construction of new buildings to create an apartment resort. The land in question is located in the municipality of Velké Karlovice in the Zlín Region. The concept of the architectural solution was to preserve as much of the existing buildings as possible, simplify their appearance, adapt the existing layout to the investor's requirements. The supporting system of the existing buildings and their shape is therefore preserved. In the design of the 1st floor of the building current cellars will be rebuilt into 4 garages with access from the west side, behind which there will be 4 smaller cellars, a larger common cellar (ski room), a lift and a technical room. On each residential floor (2nd floor and 3rd floor) there will be two apartments with 2+kk layout (entrance hall, bathroom with toilet, bedroom, living room with kitchen and dining room) and two apartments with 3+kk layout (entrance hall, bathroom, toilet, bedroom, children's room, living room with kitchen and dining room). All apartments have a balcony from the living room with kitchen and dining room facing west. The facades of the existing buildings will be in a shade of vanilla white. A steel trellis will be attached to the north side and will grow through the greenery to create a green façade. Suitable plants for this purpose are hydrangea petiole, big-leafed understory, climbing ivy and trifoliate ivy. On the south side of the building there will be a front facade made of solar panels. The roofs will be covered with black roof tiles.
Electron microscopy study of nanostructured thin film catalysts for micro-fuel cell application
Lavková, Jaroslava ; Matolínová, Iva (advisor) ; Ruterana, Pierre (referee) ; Šubrt, Jan (referee)
Present doctoral thesis is focused on electron microscopy and spectroscopy investigation of novel metal-oxide anode catalyst for fuel cell application. Catalyst based on Pt- doped cerium oxide in form of thin layers prepared by simultaneous magnetron sputtering deposition on intermediate carbonaceous films grown on silicon substrate has been studied. The influence of catalyst support composition (a-C and CNx films), deposition time of CeOx layer and other deposition parameters, as deposition rate, composition of working atmosphere and Pt concentration on the morphology of Pt-CeOx layers has been investigated mainly by Transmission Electron Microscopy (TEM). The obtained results have shown that by suitable preparation conditions combination we are able to tune final morphology and composition of catalyst. Composition of carbonaceous films and Pt-CeOx layers was examined by complementary spectroscopy techniques - Energy Dispersive X-ray Spectroscopy (EDX), Electron Energy Loss Spectroscopy (EELS) and X-ray Photoelectron Spectroscopy (XPS). Such prepared porous structures of Pt-CeOx are of promising as anode catalytic material for real fuel cell application. Keywords: cerium oxide, platinum, fuel cell, magnetron sputtering, Transmission Electron Microscopy
Magnetic nanoparticles and nanocomposites with spinel structure, their preparation and characterization
Holec, Petr ; Nižňanský, Daniel (advisor) ; Šubrt, Jan (referee) ; Sedmidubský, David (referee)
This work presents the preparation and physical properties of spinel nanoparticles and nanocomposites. All nanocomposites in diamagnetic matrix like chromites CoCr2O4, CuCr2O4, NiCr2O4, ZnCr2O4 and ferrite MgFe2O4 were prepared using sol-gel method. On the other hand, isolated nanoparticles such as MgCr2O4, MnCr2O4, CuCr2O4, NiCr2O4, and FeCr2O4, were prepared using autocombustion a co-precipitation methods. CoFe2O4 and MgFe2O4 were prepared by microemulsion alkoxide method. This microemulsion method was used for the spinel nanoparticles preparation for the first time. This work describes the influence of heat treatment temperature on the final particle size and influence of particle size on physical properties of material. The study of the influence of twovalent cationt in the spinel structure on the magnetic properties of chromites was also carried out. The final samples were characterized by XRD powder diffraction, Mössbauer spectroscopy, infrared and Raman spectroscopy, and HRTEM. The dependence of magnetization on applied magnetic field at constant temperature and ZFC (zero-field cooling) - FC (field cooling) measurement was carried out on the prepared sample.
Physico-chemical properties of oxamic and glyoxylic acids and their affinity to lanthanides
Zakharanka, Anastasiya ; Tyrpekl, Václav (advisor) ; Šubrt, Jan (referee)
This bachelor work focuses on studies of chosen aspects of the basic physicochemical properties of oxamic and glyoxylic acids and their affinity to lanthanides, cerium, and gadolinium taken as the representatives. Room temperature solubilities, pKa values, thermal and photochemical stability of the acids have been evaluated. The acids' affinity to lanthanide (III) ions in an aqueous solution has been studied using various conventional laboratory techniques and instrumental methods. Lanthanide oxalate decahydrates have been synthesized using heterogeneous and homogeneous precipitation routes and characterized using classical solid-state analytical techniques. Keywords: oxalic acid precipitation, oxamic acid, oxamates, oxalates, glyoxylic acid, f-block metals chemistry
Living on the outskirts of Brno
Stanislavová, Soňa ; Šubrt, Jan (referee) ; Dulenčín, Juraj (advisor) ; Bečkovský, David (advisor)
The bachelor thesis is a continuation of an architectural study, which I completed in the third semester of my bachelor studies in the academic year of 2018/2019. The task was to design modern housing on the edge of the city in Brno, Líšeň. The corner plot is defined by Ondráčkova and Zlámanky Streets. The content of this thesis is to develop the architectural study into documentation for permission to construct and documents for project completion. Function of the building is housing in four apartments within three above-ground stories and a basement story including technical facilities (underground parking, cellars, utility room, storeroom, wheeled-storage room). External areas are partially added to the apartments and partially create common space. The intention is to design modern, above standard housing

National Repository of Grey Literature : 113 records found   beginprevious31 - 40nextend  jump to record:
See also: similar author names
16 Šubrt, Jiří
Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.