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In The Vacant See in Early Modern Rome John M. Hunt offers a social history of the papal interregnum from 1559 to 1655. The study concentrates on the Roman people’s relationship with their sacred ruler. Using criminal sources from the Archivio di Stato di Roma and Vatican sources, Hunt emphasizes the violent and tumultuous nature of the lapse in papal authority that followed the pope’s death. The vacant see was a time in which Romans of modest social backgrounds claimed unprecedented power. From personal acts of revenge to collective protests staged at the Capitol Hill and citywide discussions of the papal election the vacant see provided Romans with a unique opportunity for political involvement in an age of omnipresent hierarchy.
Papacy --- Vacancy of the Holy See. --- History
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The Dutch Police is one of the largest owners of public real estate in the Netherlands. From police station to forensic laboratory, from listed buildings in the centre of The Hague to large-scale facilities next to the motorway in Driebergen: the task of accommodating the Police is as diverse as it is challenging. Themes such as innovation and sustainability, health and safety, as well as identity, flexibility and affordability are all of relevance for the Police’s accommodation strategy. Efforts are being made to strike a new balance between the physical, mobile and digital workplace.Since the formation of the National Police, there has been an enormous challenge to accommodate the organization. In realizing this task, the police has the ambition to raise the quality of police buildings as well as the experience users have in the buildings. At the same time, the police is at the heart of an ever changing society: The accommodation needs to meet the requirements posed by several developments such as the energy transition, climate change and digitization. How do these developments influence the task of future-proofing (cultural) heritage? Which role can our heritage buildings play in these transitions?The key lies in our present actions coupled with the lessons of the past. Different approaches on Built Heritage will open our eyes and help with today’s issues. To see what is valuable. Will the decisions made in the past be our strength or pitfall? How will objects developed in the past, exposed to today’s spatial developments, help us? Through the power of imagination, the Studio Vacantheritage from Heritage and Architecture proudly reveals many possibilities.
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The Dutch Police is one of the largest owners of public real estate in the Netherlands. From police station to forensic laboratory, from listed buildings in the centre of The Hague to large-scale facilities next to the motorway in Driebergen: the task of accommodating the Police is as diverse as it is challenging. Themes such as innovation and sustainability, health and safety, as well as identity, flexibility and affordability are all of relevance for the Police’s accommodation strategy. Efforts are being made to strike a new balance between the physical, mobile and digital workplace.Since the formation of the National Police, there has been an enormous challenge to accommodate the organization. In realizing this task, the police has the ambition to raise the quality of police buildings as well as the experience users have in the buildings. At the same time, the police is at the heart of an ever changing society: The accommodation needs to meet the requirements posed by several developments such as the energy transition, climate change and digitization. How do these developments influence the task of future-proofing (cultural) heritage? Which role can our heritage buildings play in these transitions?The key lies in our present actions coupled with the lessons of the past. Different approaches on Built Heritage will open our eyes and help with today’s issues. To see what is valuable. Will the decisions made in the past be our strength or pitfall? How will objects developed in the past, exposed to today’s spatial developments, help us? Through the power of imagination, the Studio Vacantheritage from Heritage and Architecture proudly reveals many possibilities.
Technology, engineering, agriculture --- Space --- Buildings --- Typology --- Vacancy --- Analyses --- Re-design --- Architecture --- Space --- Buildings --- Typology --- Vacancy --- Analyses --- Re-design --- Architecture
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The Dutch Police is one of the largest owners of public real estate in the Netherlands. From police station to forensic laboratory, from listed buildings in the centre of The Hague to large-scale facilities next to the motorway in Driebergen: the task of accommodating the Police is as diverse as it is challenging. Themes such as innovation and sustainability, health and safety, as well as identity, flexibility and affordability are all of relevance for the Police’s accommodation strategy. Efforts are being made to strike a new balance between the physical, mobile and digital workplace.Since the formation of the National Police, there has been an enormous challenge to accommodate the organization. In realizing this task, the police has the ambition to raise the quality of police buildings as well as the experience users have in the buildings. At the same time, the police is at the heart of an ever changing society: The accommodation needs to meet the requirements posed by several developments such as the energy transition, climate change and digitization. How do these developments influence the task of future-proofing (cultural) heritage? Which role can our heritage buildings play in these transitions?The key lies in our present actions coupled with the lessons of the past. Different approaches on Built Heritage will open our eyes and help with today’s issues. To see what is valuable. Will the decisions made in the past be our strength or pitfall? How will objects developed in the past, exposed to today’s spatial developments, help us? Through the power of imagination, the Studio Vacantheritage from Heritage and Architecture proudly reveals many possibilities.
Technology, engineering, agriculture --- Space --- Buildings --- Typology --- Vacancy --- Analyses --- Re-design --- Architecture
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Easter --- Paschal mystery --- Popes --- Vacancy of the Holy See --- Death --- Election --- Catholic Church --- History --- Liturgy
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Christian church history --- anno 1600-1699 --- anno 1700-1799 --- Papacy --- Vacancy of the Holy See --- History --- Papacy - History - 1566-1799
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The expansion of urban areas has facilitated the conversion of undeveloped lands, which has led to environmental degradation, such as loss of habitats, hydro-modification, and the collapse of existing ecosystems. Recent climate change has exacerbated these damages by causing more frequent and serious hazards. To attenuate the impacts of urbanization and the negative effects of climate change, green infrastructure (GI) planning (e.g., nature-based strategies, technologies, policies, and solutions) has arisen as an important approach for balancing urban development and nature. GI offers a variety of benefits to our cities by reducing stormwater runoff, heat waves, and air pollution; expanding wildlife habitats; and increasing recreational opportunities and even nearby property values.
stormwater management --- urban heat island --- cost–benefit analysis --- ecosystem services --- urban green infrastructure --- green infrastructure --- indexing --- random forest --- interpretation of machine learning --- urbanization --- shapley additive explanation --- park characteristic --- extreme gradient boost --- Dallas --- land use land cover --- construction site --- particulate matter emissions --- emission factor --- prediction technology --- urban shrinkage --- vacancy parcel data --- multilevel analysis --- predicting vacancy --- access inequity --- systematic mapping --- empirical studies --- city scale --- inequity mitigation
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Electron transport --- Holes (Electron deficiencies) --- Holes (Semiconductors) --- Negative ion vacancy --- Crystals --- Energy-band theory of solids --- Semiconductors --- Excess electrons --- Electrons --- Free electron theory of metals --- Transport theory --- Defects --- Quantum mechanics. Quantumfield theory
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The expansion of urban areas has facilitated the conversion of undeveloped lands, which has led to environmental degradation, such as loss of habitats, hydro-modification, and the collapse of existing ecosystems. Recent climate change has exacerbated these damages by causing more frequent and serious hazards. To attenuate the impacts of urbanization and the negative effects of climate change, green infrastructure (GI) planning (e.g., nature-based strategies, technologies, policies, and solutions) has arisen as an important approach for balancing urban development and nature. GI offers a variety of benefits to our cities by reducing stormwater runoff, heat waves, and air pollution; expanding wildlife habitats; and increasing recreational opportunities and even nearby property values.
Research & information: general --- Meteorology & climatology --- stormwater management --- urban heat island --- cost–benefit analysis --- ecosystem services --- urban green infrastructure --- green infrastructure --- indexing --- random forest --- interpretation of machine learning --- urbanization --- shapley additive explanation --- park characteristic --- extreme gradient boost --- Dallas --- land use land cover --- construction site --- particulate matter emissions --- emission factor --- prediction technology --- urban shrinkage --- vacancy parcel data --- multilevel analysis --- predicting vacancy --- access inequity --- systematic mapping --- empirical studies --- city scale --- inequity mitigation --- stormwater management --- urban heat island --- cost–benefit analysis --- ecosystem services --- urban green infrastructure --- green infrastructure --- indexing --- random forest --- interpretation of machine learning --- urbanization --- shapley additive explanation --- park characteristic --- extreme gradient boost --- Dallas --- land use land cover --- construction site --- particulate matter emissions --- emission factor --- prediction technology --- urban shrinkage --- vacancy parcel data --- multilevel analysis --- predicting vacancy --- access inequity --- systematic mapping --- empirical studies --- city scale --- inequity mitigation
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