01051nam a22002771i 450099100411152970753620031006080113.0031111s1990 uik|||||||||||||||||eng 0192815024b12522983-39ule_instARCHE-055625ExLDip.to LingueitaA.t.i. Arché s.c.r.l. Pandora Sicilia s.r.l.823.6Radcliffe, Ann168239The mysteries of Udolpho /Ann Radcliffe ; edited with an introduction by Bonamy Dobree ; explanatory notes by Frederick GarberOxford :Oxford university press,1990XIV, 676 p. ;19 cmThe world' s classicsGarber, FrederickDobree, Bonamy.b1252298302-04-1413-11-03991004111529707536LE012 828.6 RAD 312012000132306le012-E0.00-l- 01010.i1296492x13-11-03Mysteries of Udolpho31865UNISALENTOle01213-11-03ma -enguik4104983nam 2201273z- 450 991067404350332120220706(CKB)5690000000011991(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/87532(oapen)doab87532(EXLCZ)99569000000001199120202207d2022 |y 0engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierHeritage Patterns-Representative ModelsBaselMDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute20221 online resource (234 p.)3-0365-4085-7 3-0365-4086-5 The Heritage Patterns-Representative Models issue of Heritage welcomed twelve articles that discussed traditional and contemporary methodologies, as well as scholars from different backgrounds who intended to seek patterns of tangible heritage and its underlying principles to understand the diversity of heritage approaches. The Special Issue aims to research the patterns in heritage and the underlying rules that define tangible heritage as a universal value in spatial coexistence, economics, urban life, and design via case studies and theoretical proposals that could be implemented in the future. The pattern language and the heritage phenomenon could act as a base of observation to deduct logic and create generative algorithms (generative design); to understand the importance of spatial connection with tangible heritage and urban forms (space syntax, urban morphology, and urban morphometrics) and its visibility; as well as archaeological, architectural, and urban heritage. Based on the UNESCO-ICOMOS doctrines and the examination of morphological regions, urban morphological research and its different layers (urban forms, structural components, built environment, urban tissue, and their interaction) act as a background and foundation for general urban heritage conservation and protection proposals, and also as the base of specific interventions in the built environment caused by natural disasters.ArchitecturebicsscThe Artsbicsscarchitectural heritagearchitecturearchitecture for childrenAsian citiesAustria-HungaryBarnetblock-plans of buildingsbuilt environmentcolonisationcommunity buildingcommunity heritageconservationCroatiacultural heritagedesign guidelinesdesign reparationecologyergonomicsevidence-based designfield of viewgenerative modellinghealing architectureheritageheritage protectionheritage syntax urbanismhistorical corehistorico-geographicalindigenous place valuesindustrial heritageindustrial landscapeindustrial landscape planningindustrial tourisminfluencing factorsintangible heritageisovistIstanbulliveable urbanismlost landscapeslow-techmappingMichel de CerteauNew Yorkpattern languageplotspost-industrial landscapepreservationregionalismspace syntaxspatial distributionspatial distribution characteristicsspatial layoutspatial morphologyspatial structurestreetssuburban centressurveyingsustainable urbanisationsystem of public squares and city parkstangible heritagetown plantown-planUNESCO heritageuniversal designurban blockurban design of 19th centuryurban formurban heritageurban historyurban morphologyurban planningurban reconstructionurban transformationvernacular architectureViennavisibility analysisZagrebArchitectureThe ArtsLovra Évaedt1339013Lovra ÉvaothBOOK9910674043503321Heritage Patterns-Representative Models4422299UNINA