National Repository of Grey Literature 388 records found  beginprevious193 - 202nextend  jump to record: Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Space to live
Pekař, Jan ; Likavčan, Maroš (referee) ; Mléčka, Jan (advisor)
This master thesis is devoted to the issue of healthy living in the Brno urban gap. Due to the trend of urbanization and densification of housing, it is increasingly difficult to find a suitable environment for healthy living. Therefore, the thesis tries to find a solution how we can design a house, its layout and interior furnishings for healthy living even in these difficult conditions. During the previous semester of the pre-dissertation, I have interviewed experts and based on these interviews, I propose appropriate layouts and interior features. These elements were designed to promote the health and well-being of the occupants. These elements include such things as the placement and characteristic of lights or lighting, materials or interior elements that promote healthy human development. One of the main objectives of the work is to show that even in areas with limited space, natural light,natural greenery it is possible to create healthy living. The thesis also tries to answer questions about the impact of modern technologies and new trends such as home office, or other options for working and studying from home, and to show how we can minimize this impact through appropriate design of the apartment building. Overall, this thesis addresses current issues such as diseases of affluence, major lifestyle changes caused by the development of modern technology that our dwellings have not been able to adapt to. It shows how it is possible to design healthy housing even in spaces where it may be initially difficult and how such a solution can help to minimize the impact of modern times on the health of the inhabitants.
We are one big family!
Boháč, David ; Matoušková, Petra (referee) ; Mléčka, Jan (advisor)
Diploma thesis "We are one big family!" deals with diversifying the age structure of the population and creating a community and flexible environment for all generations, while preserving the intimacy of families.
Make Partizánska Ľupča great again!
Likavčanová, Lucia ; ArtD, Tomáš Boroš, (referee) ; Mléčka, Jan (advisor)
Proposal of an urban-architectural study for Partizánska Ľupča presents an idea of converting the village center and the Pergler Mill. The proposal responds to the weakening of connections between the public space and its users and aims to restore the interrupted continuity while respecting the unique historical context of the locality. The first part of the proposal deals with the story of the square, the transformation of its functional content over time, and the attempt to reintegrate it into the lives of the inhabitants through minor interventions and reorganization of spatial arrangement. It seeks to find an answer to the complex question of adapting the public space of Ľupča, which has undergone historical development from a pulsating market square of a significant medieval town to today’s form of an empty large paved area in the center of the village. The second part of the proposal is dedicated to the Pergler Mill located on the southwest edge of the square. The transformation of one of the most technically preserved mills in the territory of the Czech Republic and Slovakia aims to reintegrate it into the village’s structure. The last part of the proposal is dedicated to Ľupčianka, a stream that flows from the beginning to the end of the village. Once a significant part of the lives of the inhabitants, it is now an almost invisible element. The ambition of the interventions is not to restore its past use but to bring a new perspective on the potential of this forgotten part of public space. The interventions represent visions of how to complement these places and initiate new experiences and emotions.
Spontaneous architecture
Bevelaquová, Diana ; Paňák, Pavol (referee) ; Mléčka, Jan (advisor)
This is a follow up on the work in the pre-thesis project Spontaneous architecture of Slovakia's segregated settlements. Architectonic principles and components, which were formulated in this previous work are based on in-terrain research and analysis of excluded Romani hamlets. These components are further used in this work. Certain principles that don't conform to the accepted procedures and trends in current urban planning get utilized here as well. These currently accepted trends in effect create tech-dominated no-man lands, that are more suitable as real estate speculation vehicles rather than living spaces. Areas created this way lack identity. This environment can't be shaped further by the owners. Shared neighborhood spaces don't emerge there and so humans can't identify with such an environment. In this thesis, these observed principles are applied to a concrete urban design in the center of Brno on a plot of land formerly occupied by factory Kras. This work attempts to provide an alternative approach to city planning and to designing buildings. The design approach presented here has the ambition to provide sufficient population density necessary for a city to function properly while not sacrificing the social and neighborly connections. This project concerns itself with the relationship between buildings and streets while putting the current regulations and norms for designing such areas in question. There is an ambition to bring streets back to life by following the example of the studied segregated settlements while allowing for phasing of the construction in the area.
Various Options
Vazačová, Anna ; Holcnerová, Lenka (referee) ; Mléčka, Jan (advisor)
Many materials and things are marked as waste and under this marking their further use is perceived negatively. However, these are often materials and products that can be easily reused without much energy in the same or completely new ways. Locality is used as a tool for discovering new possibilities for the city and rediscovering the way of building based directly on the surrounding environment. The concept develops the reuse and recycling of things and materials not only in the objects and architecture themselves, but also in the content and function and way of thinking of the city's inhabitants. The work elaborates the idea of how to build locally in a contemporary city. It is a kind of practical manual on how to start thinking about a given place as a used one. It is also a practical guide on how to think about local city buildings. The theoretical basis from historical to contemporary local architecture is a free addition to this project.
PIARKL
Vítková, Tereza ; Matoušková, Petra (referee) ; Mléčka, Jan (advisor)
"Being close to another person, being with them, that's the most important thing - in love, in life and in dying." Being close to another person is a basic and easily attainable need for a healthy person. Spending time with either our family relatives or friends is actually quite simple for the majority of us. Foremostly, we just put our work aside and sit on a bus, train, or plane and after a certain period of time we can be together with our closest loved ones. However, for the families with disabled children it is not that easy. If the family finds itself in a difficult life situation, often the simple “being around” might be challenging. For this particular reason, my thesis proposal aims to create a safe place for all of those who could possibly end up in a such situation – children hospital where a person can be available for a help any time needed.
PIARKL
Tomková, Sára ; Matoušková, Petra (referee) ; Mléčka, Jan (advisor)
The main aim of the bachelor thesis is to find a use for the Piarist monastery in Lipník nad Bečvou, which is currently abandoned and does not fulfill any function. Based on the analysis, we decided to design a building for the Faculty of Pharmacy that would combine space for education and science. At the same time, we try to preserve the original character of the building, while all incorporated elements should underline its historical beauty and functional potential. We open up the original space with several cramped rooms and we design laboratories, classrooms, auditoriums or garden greenhouses and fields in the exterior, which are used for educational and research activities of the faculty. Besides that, it includes spaces for ordinary people of Lipník nad Bečvou, such as a teahouse, library, pharmacy or exhibition spaces so they have the opportunity to use the local services in a pleasant environment and learn information about the field of pharmacy or the cultivation of medicinal plants. The arrival of young, educated people to the city is also a significant benefit of the monastery's reconstruction. Two open atriums that are surrounded by the building are parts of the monastery. Thanks to them, a lot of daylight enters the building. They connect the outdoor space in front of the monastery with the garden at the back. The new proposed entrance is therefore made up of glass so you can see the atrium and the garden when you enter the building. The important point in the central part of the monastery is a large, open and airy space with a staircase that connects the various parts of the building. It provides a meeting place for students, teachers and other members of the university who can spend time together, exchange knowledge, and learn.
PIARKL
Rontová, Vanessa ; Matoušková, Petra (referee) ; Mléčka, Jan (advisor)
The bachelor thesis deals with the reconstruction of the building of the Piarist monastery in Lipník nad Bečvou. The building has been unused for more than 20 years and it is difficult to find a suitable use for it, although it has great potential due to its size and the corresponding extensive garden. The proposal is aimed at revitalizing the building by inserting a multifunctional hall, opening the monastery garden to the public and other interventions. In addition to restoring the monastery, the goal was to create a space for people that would support and enrich their cultural and social life.
PIARKL
Palacková, Katarína ; Matoušková, Petra (referee) ; Mléčka, Jan (advisor)
Piarist monastery, known in the past as a place of education and development. Now dilapidated and spiritless. Just empty and silence. Silently waiting for his revival. The work deals with the reconstruction of the Piarist monastery in Lipník nad Bečvou.
Self Home
Lučanová, Rebeka ; Pospíšilová, Barbora (referee) ; Mléčka, Jan (advisor)
The house is the reflection of the social needs and relationships of the people who live in it. In the past, houses were simpler in their utilitarianism and unambiguity - they were created on the basis of the balance of needs of their inhabitants. The central place of the traditional Slovak peasant family was the oven and hearth, which were also the center of dining, joint work, and consumption. The folk architecture was characterized by the reason of the people of its time, who did not overestimate their possibilities or the possibilities of the country they inhabited. Their houses were suitable for climatic conditions and usually used the materials they had at hand. What is the ideal and at the same time affordable form of living space for my family today? What do I expect from our future home? With the help of collected data about various historical periods from the countryside and the city, by evaluating the functional spaces of dwellings, changing them, and adapting to them over time, I will try to create my own image of home. The aim of the theoretical part of the work is to focus on the relational and material side of the home and then in the design part to find the balance of these two levels in a particular design.

National Repository of Grey Literature : 388 records found   beginprevious193 - 202nextend  jump to record:
Interested in being notified about new results for this query?
Subscribe to the RSS feed.