National Repository of Grey Literature 6 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
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.
Fairytales about selfdetermination.
Sachrová, Tereza ; Babáková, Bernardeta (referee) ; Klímová, Barbora (advisor)
In my bachelor thesis I present a text named Tales from Beztrudy land in an author book. It’s 12 stories about Lutynka and Hynek living in an abandoned narrow gauge railway near a train station in a land called Beztrudy. They live with eighteen dogs, with a cat without one leg Prlenka, with half dog half fox Bařinka and one domesticated bird. Together with their friends, they face everyday problems (getting food, changing seasons, growing a group of dogs, bottling honey, going to the ball, etc.), as well as traumas, social abnormalities, problems with the dominance of the powerful or the absence of a stable background for life. The setting of the stories - Beztrudy is a paraphrase of the Beskydy Mountains, which are the main inspiration for the stories. The goal of the thesis was to create an ecofeminist text similar to fairy tale series, which would thematize non-hierarchical interpersonal relationships, the relationship with nature or coping with abandonment. In the text part of the thesis, I also deal with the role of dialect in society or when working with language. Furthermore, I thematize here the eternal struggle to preserve the integrity of the landscape and the role of this theme in fairy tale production.
The Call of the Wild
Ivasjuková, Adéla ; Eliáš, Václav (referee) ; Kratochvíl, Jan (advisor)
The bachelor thesis focuses on the design of a recreational area in the village of Ostravice. The recreational complex with a focus on yoga enriches the village with another possible way of recreation. The complex includes a yoga studio with 2 halls and a room for massages, a main building with a restaurant and accommodation, cabins and a wellness centre with a connection to the biotope. The aim of the design is to combine yoga and the beautiful, peaceful environment of the Beskydy Mountains.
CARBON Visitor Center
Ondrová, Simona ; Šindlar, Jiljí (referee) ; Marek, Jiří (advisor)
The work deals with the design of the visitor center in the area of the Frenštát mine, Trojanovice municipality. The proposal is based on highlighting the dominant features of the area under consideration. The goal of the project was to design a distinctive object - a "sculpture" that would provide visitors with spaces for education, lectures and refreshments. The largest part of the building is made up of exhibition spaces, which allow visitors to browse permanent and temporary exhibits related in particular to the issue of mining areas. The exhibition also includes an outdoor exhibition. The dominant feature of the proposed building is the observation tower, which gives visitors a view of the Beskydy Mountains and a closer look at the mining activity.
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.
Effect of elevated CO2 on morphological and photosynthetic parameters in two understory grass species in Beskydy Mountains
Holub, Petr ; Klem, Karel ; Urban, Otmar
We transplanted two grass species, Calamagrostis arundinacea and Luzula sylvatica, to the understory of\na 10-year-old experimental mixed forest exposed to ambient (385 μmol CO2 mol–1, AC) and elevated (700\nμmol CO2 mol–1, EC) atmospheric CO2 concentration using a glass dome facility. Effects of EC on plant\nmorphology and photosynthesis were examined after three years of treatment. We tested the hypotheses\nthat shade-tolerant species can profit from EC even at low light conditions and that relatively low accumulation\nof assimilates at such light conditions will not cause CO2-induced down-regulation of photosynthesis.\nWe expected that EC can substitute insufficient light intensities under the tree canopy and lead to both\nhigher biomass production and survival of plants in deep forest understories. The typical shade-tolerant\nspecies L. sylvatica exhibited positive acclimation under EC allowing higher light use efficiency under subsaturating\nlight intensities as compared to plants grown under AC. In contrast, C. arundinacea showed\nhigher stimulation of growth and photosynthetic rates by EC mainly under saturating light intensities at\nthe beginning of the growing season, when the forest leaf area is not fully developed and the open canopy\nallows a greater proportion of incident light to reach the understory. Our data indicate that growth and\nphysiological responses of EC plants in forest understories are species specific, differ from responses of\nsun-exposed plants, and depend on degree of shading.

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