Architecture, Building and Planning - Theses

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    Victorian architectural ornament
    Errey, Elva L. ( 1972)
    Summary. Part One Is concerned with a technical and historical account of the chief materials employed in architectural ornament in the period indicated; cement and plaster, terracotta and brick, wood and metal. Part Two is a catalogue of the ornamental types and forms produced in these materials based on an analysis of over two thousand buildings and illustrated by just over one thousand drawings, encompassing the following categories : cement and plaster - acroteria, parapet treatments (chiefly pediments), scrolls, finials, balustrades, window surrounds, shells, keystones, swags and festoons, studs, friezes, consoles or brackets, capitals and chimneys (rendered); clay products - ridge cresting, finials, chimney pots, brickwork patterns and chimneys (exposed brick); wood - gable end fillers, bargeboards, struts or brackets, verandah woodwork; cast-iron - balustrades, friezes, brackets, ridge cresting and window guards; pressed metal - wall and ceiling lining, centre roses, cornices, roofing finishes and finials. Part Three deals with the buildings as a whole, considering stylistic changes and the typology of distinct groups of structures under the headings: offices, warehouses, factories and banks; shops - major and minor; hotels; town and shire halls; court houses; hospitals; schools; railway buildings; theatres and halls; miscellaneous public buildings; houses employing bricks in contrast colours; houses employing red brick with cream dressings; "Italianate" houses ; "Italianate" terraces; Queen Anne style houses; sub-Queen Anne and bungalow houses. The stylistic changes in general may be summarized broadly as proceeding from a mixture of details derived from Gothic and Classical sources applied to buildings of non-historical (nineteenth century) character via another pseudo-historical revival (Queen Anne in two major forms), followed by an admixture of fairly superficial Art Nouveau influence to a welter of historically oriented revivals and abstractions and simplifications of preceding forms. These developments overlap considerably and appear with variable force and diversity according to the type of buildings. Part Four is a brief account of the work of one hundred and seventy-five leading architects or builders of the period arranged alphabetically under the name of the architect or firm. The emphasis throughout is on dealing with as broad a range of examples as possible, rather than concentrating only on large scale and/or progressive projects.
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    Evaluating cultural learning in virtual environments
    Champion, Erik Malcolm ( 2006)
    There is still a great deal of opportunity for research on contextual interactive immersion in virtual heritage environments. The general failure of virtual environment technology to create engaging and educational experiences may be attributable not just to deficiencies in technology or in visual fidelity, but also to a lack of contextual and performative-based interaction, such as that found in games. This thesis will suggest improvements will result from more research on the below issues: 1. Place versus Cyberspace: What creates a sensation of place (as a cultural site) in a virtual environment in contradistinction to a sensation of a virtual environment as a collection of objects and spaces? 2. Cultural Presence versus Social Presence and Presence: Which factors help immerse people spatially and thematically into a cultural learning experience? 3. Realism versus Interpretation: Does an attempt to perfect fidelity to sources and to realism improve or hinder the cultural learning experience? 4. Education versus Entertainment: Does an attempt to make the experience engaging improve or hinder the cultural learning experience? This doctoral thesis outlines a theoretical definition of place, culture, and presence that may become a matrix for virtual environment design as well as a discussion of the advantages and disadvantages of appropriating game-style interaction to enhance engagement. A virtual environment was built using Adobe Atmosphere to test whether cultural understanding and engagement can be linked to the type of interaction offered. The thesis also includes a survey of evaluation mechanisms that may be specifically suitable for virtual heritage environments. In its review of appropriate methodology, the thesis suggests new terms and criteria to assess the contextual appropriateness of various evaluation methods, and provides seven schematic examples of game-style plot devices that lend themselves to evaluation. The test-bed is the evaluation of a virtual archaeology project in Palenqué Mexico using theories of cultural immersion as well as computer game technology and techniques. The case study of Palenqué involved five types of evaluation specifically chosen to assess cultural awareness and understanding gained from different forms of interaction in a virtual heritage environment.
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    Understanding the emerging commercial property cycles in China
    Wu, Hao (University of Melbourne, 2007)
    This thesis examines cyclical behaviours in the commercial property market system in China since it started to emerge in the early 1990s. It shows the importance of the economic transition in explaining commercial property cycles in China. Although the price mechanism that underpins the emerging Chinese property market system has started to play a dominant role, the transition process from the planned economy to the market economy has influenced the inter-relationship of the commercial property market system, causing low effective demand and supply lag through land supply, money flow, investment behaviour, planning control and change of urban built form. This has altered the cyclical behaviour of the commercial property market at the aggregate level. The basic driver remains to be the state-market interplays in relation to market behavioural changes. To answer the research question, two commercial property markets, namely Guangzhou and Hainan, were chosen for studying the equilibrium and adjustment processes using semi-structured interviews and statistical data. Standard property cycle theory was applied and special elements of the imbalanced nature of the process of structural change were also introduced in the analysis. Using a general equilibrium approach to analyse the selected commercial property markets, the study recognises the important role the state plays in the balance of space demand and supply at the submarket level. Within a structure of office markets, which concerns space utilisation and asset investment, the study compares various time series indicating office cycles and features relating to performance. Within the same structure, data from semi-structured interviews are also examined to provide insights on the market changes and their underlying mechanisms. Commercial property cycles in China and in mature markets have significant differences. This is mainly due to the differences in their underlying structural settings. The moving of the Chinese economic structure towards a market-led system may reduce the level of behavioural differences between mature and emerging property markets. However, the state remains to be the most influential factor to shape commercial property cycles in the process of transforming commercial property sectors and urban physical built forms in China. The study identifies close links between the economic transition and office cycles in selected markets. And the impact of the state on office market cycles is significant. It also shows the volatility and length of the recession are correlated to the economic base of each office market. In place with a simple and small-scale economy such as Hainan, the scope of the 1990s property cycle is significant. The adverse effect tends to be prolonged in these cases. The approach of the state economic reform is a key driver in amplifying or reducing the scale of property cycles. This is evidenced in both Hainan and Guangzhou markets in initial upsurges and later recessions. The state's deliberate attempt in creating and altering the market structure, either radical or gradual, has substantial impacts on the stability, hence cyclicality of the Chinese commercial property market. It is the fundamental change in the property rights system in China and the imbalance of socio-economic and urban physical structural transformations that drive commercial property cycles in China. Key words Commercial property Cycles Transition China State
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    Client and contractor attitudes to prequalification and selection processes for construction work
    Mills, Anthony John (University of Melbourne, 2002)
    Pre-qualification is a process of screening contractors prior to tender using a predetermined set of criteria. The criteria should be such that the decision maker can reduce risk factors in the choice, and also have a high probability that the firm will complete the project within time and cost, and also meet the appropriate quality standards. Pre-qualification criteria are intended to provide clients with a framework, understanding and methodology for pre-qualifying and selecting only those firms most suitable for future projects. Pre-qualification in some form has become almost standard practice within government procurement processes. The primary objective of this research is to examine the pre-qualification processes used by public sector clients in order to examine the effectiveness of their procedures. The justification for pre-qualification has been that it improves the quality and certainty of the construction process. The objective of this research is to determine the attitudes of contractors and clients to pre-qualification. The issue is to examine if the perceived advantages of pre-qualification outweigh the perceived disadvantages and thus provide some indication of its worth. This research identified two significant research questions. The first question relates to the effectiveness of existing pre-qualification criteria. Many past researchers have suggested criteria that client's consider to be important, however very little research has considered the perceptions of contractors. The success of pre-qualification is partially dependant on the attitudes of contractors, because they are stake-holders in the process. This research shows that clients and contractors often hold very different opinions on the importance of pre-qualification decision criteria; this is likely to undermine the effectiveness of the pre-qualification process. This represents a gap in past research that needs to be investigated. This research used a questionnaire to elicit the views of both clients and contractors to commonly used pre-qualification criteria. The second research question examines the effectiveness of the selection decision-making process. Once a project has been identified pre-qualified contractors are shortlisted down to a small group that are latter invited to tender. Past research established that the selection decision is highly subjective, and possibly adhoc. This research used semi-structure interviews and a series of case studies to investigate selection decision-making processes of public sector clients. The results show that a number of decision factors can be identified, and that their influence is dependant on the circumstances in which the decisions are made. The main conclusion is that stake-holders have different attitudes to the value of pre-qualification, and that this may have affected its success in the past. This research suggests that pre-qualification and selection decisions should be managed using a quality management process. All stake-holders must work more closely together in order to resolve their differences, and use benchmarking practices to more effectively manage the pre-qualification and selection environment. This research has important implications for clients that are seeking to reduce their dependence on low-bid selection procedures, and increase the use of partnering and alliance arrangements. Keywords: Contractor selection, pre-qualification, non-price selection, tendering
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    Sets, series and suites : composing the multiple artwork
    Selenitsch, Alex (University of Melbourne, 2007)
    Many artists produce compositions consisting of a group of works, where each piece is a separate work as well as a contributor to the composition of the group. Analysis of such compositions from various disciplines, and the complementary invention of creative works by the candidate have been combined to reveal three distinct strategies in such compositions: SETS (where works share explicit criteria); SERIES (where works exhibit a predictable difference) and SUITES (where works provoke complementary differences). In this study, the three strategies are articulated through the following methods and formats: Firstly, each strategy is discussed through an essay which deals with origins and derivations, that strategy's formal properties and its individual compositional procedures. The essays use examples of multiple works from a wide range of disciplines: literature, printmaking, painting, sculpture, and music. These examples are presented as relatively pure versions of each strategy. Secondly, the properties uncovered in the essays are summarised as a Matrix, which provides a means of both comparing and separating the three strategies. The matrix is intended to apply to all creative disciplines and to be used as both an analytic tool and a creative checklist. Thirdly, a number of well-known architectural works are analysed through the properties outlined in the Matrix. The works range from complex single buildings to groups of buildings. The analyses show how SETS, SERIES and SUITES can be mixed in a multiple composition. Fourthly, three architectural projects by the candidate show how the strategies of SETS, SERIES and SUITES can be applied as a project proceeds, as a planning tool for a multiple work, and as formal control. The projects are presented as individual reports. Fifthly, commentaries on these projects from the point of view of the three strategies are presented as essays; these also include related comments on the nature of architectural design practice. Sixthly, analyses of the SET, SERIES and SUITE characteristics of the candidate's three architectural projects are presented as matrix charts and Venn diagrams. To widen the discussion, the common strategy of theme and variation is redefined using the principles uncovered in examining the strategy of sets. Related effects of multiplicity such as translation, metaphor and performance are also noted, and to widen the context of compositional activity still further, the perennial problem of the multiplicity and unity of the arts is discussed in the light of the three strategies. The study concludes with observations on the diffuse nature of the methodology, on the potential of the Matrix for both art and non-art situations, and on potential future works.
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    Room to move : the politics of protecting the place of alternative culture
    Shaw, Kate (University of Melbourne, 2005)
    At the same time as changing global political-economies of land use are displacing low-income people from inner-cities, changing socio-cultural forces are inspiring marginal communities to resist. This research focuses on a relatively benign level of marginality in alternative cultures, whose loss of place in the inner-city has produced mobilisations in Europe and Australia claiming their right to the city and to difference in central, public space. The coincidence of interests between alternative cultures and cities reliant on their cultural economy has prompted some city governments to turn to their planning and heritage systems to protect their valued, and valuable, cultural diversity. But unexamined use of planning control and heritage protection can cause as many problems as it solves. The very question of protecting the place of alternative culture raises fundamental paradoxes. Advances in the last forty years in planning theory and interpretations of cultural heritage have prepared planning and heritage professionals for an exploration of new ways of treating place. Can inclusive planning and heritage practices facilitate continuity of ways of life, and contribute to a diversity of uses and meanings in the city? The paradoxes are negotiated in different ways in different contexts, and some of the stories from this research demonstrate that nuanced interventions can facilitate the continuity of alternative cultures, by creating or maintaining the conditions for their evolution and allowing them room to move. When it becomes clear that the paradoxes can be negotiated then the question changes from `can it be done?' to `what does it take?', to produce such responses not only to the place of alternative cultures, but to other areas of marginality with less symbolic capital but just a great a claim to the city. The thesis argues that marginal gentrifiers have a more important role in these processes than is usually allowed. As neither the cause nor victims of gentrification, and as participants, often, in alternative cultural and political movements, they have the resources, ability and, sometimes, willingness to mobilise in interests other than their own. Their capacity to modify the passage of gentrification comes from being part of both the political-economic and socio-cultural changes that are shaping the cities and regions of the twenty-first century, and from reflexive understandings of themselves as part of a new cultural politics of difference.
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    Architectural development in Singapore
    Seow, Eu Jin (University of Melbourne, 1973)
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    Lives & legacies : exceptional Australian garden-makers of the 20th century
    Vale, Anne Virginia (University of Melbourne, 2009)
    The proposition presented in this thesis, is that in order to examine the various influences on garden-making in Australia during the 1900s, it is important to include a breadth of writers and practitioners. Through the 1900s, garden-making progressed through exciting and interesting phases, often dictated to by international and national events of significance, such as wars, drought and fluctuating levels of affluence. Numerous creative individuals responded to the prevailing circumstances by promoting their particular interpretation of what 'a garden' was. Only a few have had their activities recorded. The promotion of these 'few' has presented a narrow view of garden-making in Australia during this time. A number of methods have been adopted for this study in order to determine which individuals would be included. Once the individuals to be discussed were determined, they were collated into four themes according to the particular era in which they operated and their philosophical approach. This thematic representation depicts various facets of garden-making that occurred within the period under discussion. The study identifies a variety of influences that shaped an individual's work; it explores how they subsequently exerted their own influence and any legacy that may be attributed to them. The study concludes that many individuals, rather than a select few, contributed to a rich and highly diverse history of garden-making in the 20th century. These creative visionaries and pioneers established a legacy that is of particular importance to Australians. This contribution to current knowledge improves our understanding of why and how we have gardened in the past. In turn, this informs the creation of a practical and philosophical framework towards garden-making into the future