Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (219) (remove)
Document Type
- Conference Proceeding (123)
- Article (65)
- Doctoral Thesis (25)
- Master's Thesis (5)
- Diploma Thesis (1)
Institute
- Professur Informatik im Bauwesen (177)
- Professur Baubetrieb und Bauverfahren (10)
- Professur Grundbau (4)
- Professur Holz- und Mauerwerksbau (4)
- Professur Allgemeine Baustoffkunde (2)
- Professur Entwerfen und Architekturtheorie (2)
- Professur Informatik in der Architektur (2)
- Professur Massivbau I (2)
- Junior-Professur Computational Architecture (1)
- Junior-Professur Europäische Medienkultur (1)
- Professur Angewandte Mathematik (1)
- Professur Aufbereitung von Baustoffen und Wiederverwertung (1)
- Professur Bauaufnahme und Baudenkmalpflege (1)
- Professur Bauchemie und Polymere Werkstoffe (1)
- Professur Bauformenlehre (1)
- Professur Bauphysik (1)
- Professur Baustatik und Bauteilfestigkeit (1)
- Professur Bodenmechanik (1)
- Professur Darstellungsmethodik (1)
- Professur Entwerfen und Industriebau (1)
- Professur Entwerfen und ländliches Bauen (1)
- Professur Planung von Ingenieurbauten (1)
- Professur Raumplanung und Raumforschung (1)
- Professur Stahlbau (1)
- Professur Verkehrsplanung und Verkehrstechnik (1)
- Professur Wasserbau (1)
Keywords
- Verteiltes System (37)
- Bautechnik (30)
- Bauwerk (27)
- Produktmodell (25)
- Simulation (23)
- Architektur (21)
- Modellierung (21)
- Mehragentensystem (19)
- Ingenieurbau (17)
- Planungsprozess (17)
Year of publication
- 2004 (219) (remove)
In this contribution the software design and implementation of an analysis server for the computation of failure probabilities in structural engineering is presented. The structures considered are described in terms of an equivalent Finite Element model, the stochastic properties, like e.g. the scatter of the material behavior or the incoming load, are represented using suitable random variables. Within the software framework, a Client-Server-Architecture has been implemented, employing the middleware CORBA for the communication between the distributed modules. The analysis server offers the possibility to compute failure probabilities for stochastically defined structures. Therefore, several different approximation (FORM, SORM) and simulation methods (Monte Carlo Simulation and Importance Sampling) have been implemented. This paper closes in showing several examples computed on the analysis server.
Many problems related to data integration in AEC can be better tackled by an approach that takes into account the heterogeneity of tasks, models and applications but does not require continuous consistency of the evolving design data, at each data management operation. Such an approach must incorporate adequate services that can facilitate reintegration of concurrently modified data at reasonably selected coordination points. In this paper we present a set of methods which, used in combination, can achieve that goal. After a description of the principal envisaged cooperative work scenario each of these methods is discussed in detail and current observations drawn from their software realisation are given. Whilst the suggested approach is valid for any EXPRESS-based data model, the practical focus of work has been on facilitating IFC-driven integration.
The increased implementation of site data capture technologies invariably results in an increase in data warehousing and database technologies to store captured data. However, restricted use of data beyond the initial application could potentially result in a loss of understanding of site processes. This could in turn lead to poor decision making at production, tactical and strategic levels. Concrete usage data have been collected from two piling processes. These data have been analysed and the results highlighted potential improvements that could be made to existing site management and estimating processes. A cost benefit analysis has been used to support decision making at the strategic level where the identified improvements require capital expenditure.
Diese erste umfassende Monographie über den Architekten, Professor und Museumsmann Manfred Lehmbruck (Paris 1913 – Stuttgart 1992) konzentriert sich neben dem Lebensweg und den theoretischen Arbeiten Lehmbrucks zum Museumsbau auf die drei realisierten Museumsbauten: das Reuchlinhaus Pforzheim, das Wilhelm-Lehmbruck-Museum Duisburg und das Federseemuseum Bad Buchau. Aber auch die drei anderen bedeutenden Gebäudeensembles, die Pausa AG Mössingen, die Berufsschule und das Stadtbad Stuttgart-Feuerbach und der Solitär der Mittelschule in Mössingen, alle fertiggestellt in den Sechziger Jahren des letzten Jahrhunderts, werden ausführlich besprochen. Das umfassende Werkverzeichnis im Anhang zeigt deutlich den Einfluß, den seine Lehrer, allen voran Ludwig Mies van der Rohe, aber auch Heinrich Tessenow, Paul Bonatz und Auguste Perret, auf die Architektursprache Lehmbrucks gehabt haben.
Pre-stressed structural elements are widely used in large-span structures. As a rule, they have higher stiffness characteristics. Pre-stressed rods can be applied as girders of different purpose, and as their separate parts, e.g. rods of trusses and frames. Among numerous ways of prestressing the compression of girders, trusses, and frames by tightenings from high-strength materials is under common application.
The presented work focuses on the presentation of a discrete event simulator which can be used for automated sequencing and optimization of building processes. The sequencing is based on the commonly used component–activity–resource relations taking structural and process constraints into account. For the optimization a genetic algorithm approach was developed, implemented and successfully applied to several real life steel constructions. In this contribution we discuss the application of the discrete event simulator including its optimization capabilities on a 4D process model of a steel structure of an automobile recycling facility.
Individual views on a building product of people involved in the design process imply different models for planning and calculation. In order to interpret these geometrical, topological and semantical data of a building model we identify a structural component graph, a graph of room faces, a room graph and a relational object graph as aids and we explain algorithms to derive these relations. The application of the technique presented is demonstrated by the analysis and discretization of a sample model in the scope of building energy simulation.
The worldwide growth of communication networks and associated technologies provide the basic infrastructure for new ways of executing the engineering process. Collaboration amongst team members seperated in time and location is of particular importance. Two broad themes can be recognized in research pertaining to distributed collaboration. One theme focusses on the technical and technological aspects of distributed work, while the other emphasises human aspects thereof. The case of finite element structural analysis in a distributed collaboratory is examined in this paper. An approach is taken which has its roots in human aspects of the structural analysis task. Based on experience of how structural engineers currently approach and execute this task while utilising standard software designed for use on local workstations only, criteria are stated for a software architechture that could support collaborative structural analysis. Aspects of a pilot application and the results of qualitative performance measurements are discussed.
The purpose of this research is to develop the method to retrieve a building name from the impression of the building. First, the images of the building are registered as database by the questionnaire. Next, the images of the objective building are compared with the degree of matching in image databases, and the building with high synthetic matching degree is retrieved. This system could get a good retrieval result. Moreover, image processing was done, and image databases are trained by neural network from the amount of characteristics of the image, and the retrieval system by image processing was examined.
An important feature of the 2003 SARS outbreak in Canada, Singapore, and Hong Kong was that many health care workers (HCWs) developed SARS after caring for patients with SARS. This has been ascribed to inadequate or ineffective patient isolation. However, it is difficult for dense cities to provide sufficient isolation facilities within a short period of time. This has raised concerns from the public for new strategies in the planning and design of isolation facilities. Considering that SARS or other infectious diseases could seriously damage our society’s development, isolation facilities that could be rapidly and economically constructed with appropriate environmental controls are essential. For this reason, the design team of the Department of Architecture collaborated with a special task force from the Faculty of Medicine, who are the frontline medical officers treating the SARS patients, to design Rapidly Assembled Isolation Patient Wards. Both architecture and medicine are well established disciplines, but they have little in common in terms of the mode of knowledge construction and practice. This induced much intellectual exploration and research interest in conducting this study. The process has provided an important reference for cross disciplinary studies between the architectural and medical domains.