Now showing items 156-175 of 788

    • the Creative Destruction of Hamilton: a Cultural approach to the Urban Regeneration of a City in Economic Transition 

      Kisielewski, Mariusz (University of Waterloo, 2012-01-25)
      Charles Darwin proclaimed, “It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent that survives. It is the one that is the most adaptable to change”. At the time, he probably did not fathom the ...
    • The Creek and the Garden:An insertion of Community Garden System in a Neighborhood Park along the Garrison Creek 

      Sridhar, Srinidhi (University of Waterloo, 2015-06-09)
      ‘The Creek and the Garden’ is about actively preparing Toronto for the surge for gardening and food production within the city and developing a strategy to ensure the future’s growing need for urban food garden space. ...
    • The Creek That is Not: A Composite Park-way at the Garrison Creek 

      Wu, Yue May (University of Waterloo, 2014-09-19)
      A century after the burial of Garrison Creek, Toronto continues to experience urban floods and unpleasant sewer problems as a result of the unsettling creek. And as gentrification spreads westwards in the city, the ...
    • CUBAN DESIGN: Ingenuity and Resiliency to Subsist 

      Reyes Martin, Amanda (University of Waterloo, 2021-09-20)
      Since 1959, the Cuban people have been deprived of consumer products common elsewhere due to the political and economic condition in the island, where an everlasting lack of access to basic resources prevails. Driven by ...
    • Cultural Assimilation and Architecture: GuanXi and the Legacy of the Chinese Canadian Church 

      Tsui, Caleb Kai Him (University of Waterloo, 2017-09-27)
      Known for priding itself as a multicultural nation, Canada's multicultural attitude does not come without a cost - as immigrants establish their roots and interact with the diverse ethnic groups within their communities, ...
    • Cultural Connectivity: Design as a method to facilitate cultural exchange within the Gerrard Bazaar 

      Shaikh, Sundus (University of Waterloo, 2015-05-07)
      As immigrants choose to reside within the suburbs and the city undergoes rapid geographical change, Toronto’s ethnic enclaves are facing significant transformation in terms of their neighbourhood demographics, economic ...
    • Cultural Interface 

      Michailova, Violeta (University of Waterloo, 2022-05-06)
      Architecture can be seen as humankind’s original canvas, a primary means of cultural expression and the total, sovereign art form. Public architecture and urban public spaces, in particular, are meant to be theaters for ...
    • Curating Architecture 

      Chen, Vikkie (University of Waterloo, 2015-01-06)
      The number and profile of exhibitions centred on architecture has increased dramatically in the past decade. Curating architecture can now be seen as a distinct field. In the current practice, architectural curation has ...
    • Curation: Representation in the Reclamation of Sudbury, Ontario Landscapes 

      Lalonde, Leanna (University of Waterloo, 2014-08-22)
      An operating mine can last as many as several decades, though individual projects have an average lifespan between 15 and 20 years. (1) This is a relatively short amount of time, and may result in the misconception that ...
    • Cyclades Archipelago: Regenerating the Productive and Tourism Landscapes 

      PITOGLOU, FOTINI (University of Waterloo, 2017-09-29)
      Through history the shifting dynamics of urban and regional development in Greece’s Cyclades Archipelago shaped its overall identity and its islands’ social, economic and political cohesion. Nowadays the emerged tourism ...
    • Cycle City: Generating a Cycling Culture in Toronto 

      Wenzel, Stephen (University of Waterloo, 2015-02-18)
      As Toronto’s population continues to grow, the city is faced with many new challenges related to the quality of urban life. Central to overcoming these challenges is a rethinking of urban mobility. As the region’s population ...
    • Dairy Goat Research Facility: Revealing Process & Provoking Interactions 

      Maki, Rain (University of Waterloo, 2021-09-22)
      The dairy goat industry in Ontario is in need of benchmarking data on the raising and caring for goats resulting in better welfare and production. The power of collective data cannot be overstated to benefit and advance ...
    • Dancing Architecture: The parallel evolution of Bharatanatyam and South Indian Architecture 

      Jayakrishnan, Kavitha (University of Waterloo, 2011-10-05)
      In her book, "Indian Classical dance", Kapila Vatsyayan describes dance as the highest order of spiritual discipline, the enactment of which is symbolic of a ritual sacrifice of one's being to a transcendental order. The ...
    • Dancing to the Desert: A Proposal for Self-Help Reconstruction of Post-Earthquake Cities in Hot-Arid Climates 

      Nejad, Sara Khakbaz (University of Waterloo, 2012-01-23)
      Natural hazards kill 82,500 people globally in a typical year, with earthquakes as the largest cause of death amongst all natural hazards in Central and Southern America, East Asia, Europe, and the Near East. Damages are ...
    • Darkness Encountered in Light 

      Frayne, Nicholas Forrest (University of Waterloo, 2020-01-15)
      The old axiom that history is doomed to repeat itself seems to be true in the contemporary world. Ideologies of hate and division are having something of a resurgence, despite our common cries of ‘never again.’ We can trace ...
    • Darkness with Shards of Light 

      Rahman, Anika Sibat (University of Waterloo, 2019-08-23)
      Realities of the world are often difficult to face. We dream of a world devoid of social ills. In the notion of 'utopia', we imagine such an environment - sparkling and full of light, but this perfect world is a delusion. ...
    • Data, Debt & Daemons: Systemic Asymmetries on Spaceship Earth 

      Chu, Wesley (University of Waterloo, 2019-10-17)
      Day by day, the rate at which we create new data increases exponentially. Our capacity to learn cannot keep up. We are tiny members of a vast universal network, incapable of discerning cause and effect. Instead, we develop ...
    • (de)militarized zone: faction space as borderline landscape 

      Lee, Jieun (University of Waterloo, 2013-01-24)
      Tension has been the most significant and constant factor in the relationship between North and South Korea over the past sixty years. The differences in the political systems and the economic disparity between the two ...
    • De-Coding Urbanity : Learning from and for Old Delhi || Preserving Cultural Urban Codes 

      Kaushal, Kanika (University of Waterloo, 2016-01-14)
      The Walled City Of Old Delhi serves as the heart of metropolitan Delhi. The city is a complex amalgamation of Mughal, Colonial and post Colonial architecture. This overlap has resulted in a rich urban fabric and networked ...
    • Dear Paul: Still absurd, after all these years 

      Varickanickal, Susan (University of Waterloo, 2014-01-23)
      I grew up in the suburbs, and perhaps I am embarrassed to admit it. But there is no use denying it. It’s written all over my face. Even though I have been away for nearly a decade, the residue of that past life still ...

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