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Two Papers 'The Grid' and 'Caesura'

Grid-connected Solar Electric Systems The Earthscan Expert Handbook for Planning Design and Installation

Grid-connected Solar Electric Systems The Earthscan Expert Handbook for Planning Design and Installation

Solar electricity – or photovoltaics (PV) – is the world's fastest growing energy technology. It can be used on a wide variety of scales from single dwellings to utility-scale solar farms providing power for whole communities. It can be integrated into existing electricity grids with relative simplicity meaning that in times of low solar energy users can continue to draw power from the grid while power can be fed or sold back into the grid at a profit when their electricity generation exceeds the amount they are using. The falling price of the equipment combined with various incentive schemes around the world have made PV into a lucrative low carbon investment and as such demand has never been higher for the technology and for people with the expertise to design and install systems. This Expert handbook provides a clear introduction to solar radiation before proceeding to cover:electrical basics and PV cells and modulesinvertersdesign of grid-connected PV systemssystem installation and commissioningmaintenance and trouble shootinghealth and safetyeconomics and marketing. Highly illustrated in full colour throughout this is the ideal guide for electricians builders and architects housing and property developers home owners and DIY enthusiasts and anyone who needs a clear introduction to grid-connected solar electric technology. | Grid-connected Solar Electric Systems The Earthscan Expert Handbook for Planning Design and Installation

GBP 32.99
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Sport Gender and Power The Rise of Roller Derby

Gender Sport and the Role of Alter Ego in Roller Derby

Stand-alone Solar Electric Systems The Earthscan Expert Handbook for Planning Design and Installation

Roofing Failures

Solar Farms The Earthscan Expert Guide to Design and Construction of Utility-scale Photovoltaic Systems

Solarnomics Setting Up and Managing a Profitable Solar Business

Mask Making Techniques Creating 3-D Characters from 2-D Designs for Theatre Cosplay Film and TV

PV and the NEC

Bion in Buenos Aires Seminars Case Presentation and Supervision

Homicide in Criminal Law A Research Companion

Transport Revolutions Moving People and Freight Without Oil

Consent Domestic and Comparative Perspectives

Developing Thinking Skills Through Creative Writing Story Steps for 9–12 Year Olds

Developing Thinking Skills Through Creative Writing Story Steps for 9–12 Year Olds

Developing Thinking Skills Through Creative Writing: Story Steps for 9-12 Year Olds is a practical and easy-to-use teacher resource helping children across a wide age and ability range to develop the skills necessary to write more effectively. Step-by-step instructions encourage children to tackle tasks of increasing difficulty while broadening their knowledge and experiences of fictional genres. With chapters separated into distinct genres: ghost story fantasy science fiction history pirate story thriller and Gothic horror this book: Offers a summary at the start of each chapter to help teachers select the relevant activities. Covers multiple aspects of storytelling from narrative structure plots characters and settings to vocabulary word choice sentence structure and punctuation. Provides a cross referencing grid showing which aspects of writing appear in each chapter. Includes guidance notes extension activities and general tips. Adaptable to different teaching situations this book offers the opportunity for teachers to work through the book genre by genre or take a 'skills route' with different activities from different chapters to create their own programme of study. Fully illustrated and supporting the requirements of the National Curriculum Developing Thinking Skills Through Creative Writing is a valuable aid for all Key Stage 2 teachers. | Developing Thinking Skills Through Creative Writing Story Steps for 9–12 Year Olds

GBP 24.99
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Puerto Rico’s Henry Klumb A Modern Architect’s Sense of Place

Puerto Rico’s Henry Klumb A Modern Architect’s Sense of Place

This book follows Henry Klumb’s life in architecture from Cologne Germany to Puerto Rico. Arriving on the island Klumb was a one-time German immigrant a moderately successful designer and previously a senior draftsman with Frank Lloyd Wright. Over the next forty years Klumb would emerge as Puerto Rico’s most prolific locally well-known and celebrated modern architect. In addition to becoming a leading figure in Latin American modern architecture Klumb also became one of Frank Lloyd Wright’s most accomplished protégés and an architect with a highly attuned social and environmental consciousness. Cruz explores his life works and legacy through the lens of a sense of place defined as the beliefs that people adopt actions undertaken and feelings developed towards specific locations and spaces. He argues that the architect’s sense of place was a defining quality of his life and work most evident in the houses he designed and built in Puerto Rico. Puerto Rico’s Henry Klumb offers a historical narrative culminating in a series of architectural analyses focusing on four key design strategies employed in Klumb’s work: vernacular architecture the grid and the landscape dense urban spaces and open air rooms. This book is aimed at researchers academics and postgraduate students interested in Latin American architecture modernism and architectural history. | Puerto Rico’s Henry Klumb A Modern Architect’s Sense of Place

GBP 38.99
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Aleppo A History

Aleppo A History

Shortlisted for the 2018 British-Kuwait Friendship Society Book Prize Aleppo is one of the longest-surviving cities of the ancient and Islamic Middle East. Until recently it enjoyed a thriving urban life—in particular an active traditional suq with a continuous tradition going back centuries. Its tangle of streets still follow the Hellenistic grid and above it looms the great Citadel which contains recently-uncovered remains of a Bronze/Iron Age temple complex suggesting an even earlier role as a ‘high place’ in the Canaanite tradition. In the Arab Middle Ages Aleppo was a strongpoint of the Islamic resistance to the Crusader presence. Its medieval Citadel is one of the most dramatic examples of a fortified enclosure in the Islamic tradition. In Mamluk and Ottoman times the city took on a thriving commercial role and provided a base for the first European commercial factories and consulates in the Levant. Its commercial life funded a remarkable building tradition with some hundreds of the 600 or so officially-declared monuments dating from these eras. Its diverse ethnic mixture with significant Kurdish Turkish Christian and Armenian communities provide a richer layering of influences on the city’s life. In this volume Ross Burns explores Aleppo's rich history from its earliest history through to the modern era providing a thorough treatment of this fascinating city history accessible both to scholarly readers and to the general public interested in a factual and comprehensive survey of the city’s past. | Aleppo A History

GBP 31.99
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Christian Environmentalism and Human Responsibility in the 21st Century Questions of Stewardship and Accountability

Christian Environmentalism and Human Responsibility in the 21st Century Questions of Stewardship and Accountability

Christian Environmentalism and Human Responsibility in the 21st Century comprises original scholarly essays and creative works exploring the implications of Christian environmentalism through literary and cultural criticism and creative reflection. The volume draws on a flourishing recent body of Christian ecocriticism and environmental activity incorporating both practical ethics and environmental spirituality but with particular emphasis on the notion of human responsibility. It discusses responsibility in its dual sense as both the recognized cause of environmental destruction and the ethical imperative of accountability to the nonhuman environment. The book crosses boundaries between traditional scholarly and creative reflection through a global range of topics: African oral tradition Ohio artists off the grid immigrant self-metaphors of land and sea iconic writers from Milton to O’Connor to Atwood and Indigenous Canadian models for listening to the nonhuman Mother of us all. In its incorporation of academic and creative pieces from scholars and creative artists across North America this volume shows how environmental work of its nature and necessity crosses traditional academic and community boundaries. In both form and orientation this collection speaks to the most urgent intellectual physical social and spiritual needs of the present day. This book will appeal to scholars researchers and upper-level students interested in the relationship between religion and environment ethics animal welfare poetry memoir and post-secularism. | Christian Environmentalism and Human Responsibility in the 21st Century Questions of Stewardship and Accountability

GBP 130.00
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Mentoring Teachers in the Primary School A Practical Guide

Upholstery Conservation: Principles and Practice

The Prop Building Guidebook For Theatre Film and TV

Analysing Architecture The universal language of place-making

Analysing Architecture The universal language of place-making

Now in its fifth edition Analysing Architecture has become internationally established as the best introduction to architecture. Aimed primarily at those studying architecture it offers a clear and accessible insight into the workings of this rich and fascinating subject. With copious illustrations from his own notebooks the author dissects examples from around the world and all periods of history to explain the underlying strategies in architectural design and show how drawing may be used as a medium for analysis. In this new edition Analysing Architecture has been revised and expanded. Notably the chapter on ‘How Analysis Can Help Design’ has been redeveloped to clearly explain this crucially important aspect of study to a beginner readership. Four new chapters have been added to the section dealing with Themes in Spatial Organisation on ‘Axis’ ‘Grid’ ‘Datum Place’ and ‘Hidden’. Material from the 'Case Studies' in previous editions has been redistributed amongst earlier chapters. The ‘Introduction' has been completely rewritten; and the format of the whole book has been adjusted to allow for the inclusion of more and better illustrative examples. Works of architecture are instruments for managing orchestrating modifying our relationship with the world around us. They frame just about everything we do. Architecture is complex subtle frustrating… but ultimately extremely rewarding. It can be a difficult discipline to get to grips with; nothing in school quite prepares anyone for the particular demands of an architecture course. But this book will help. www. instagram. com/analysingarchitecture | Analysing Architecture The universal language of place-making

GBP 39.99
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The Concept of Monument in Achaemenid Empire

The Concept of Monument in Achaemenid Empire

The aim of this book is to explore the significance of the concept of ‘monument’ in the context of the Achaemenid Empire (550-330 BC) with particular reference to the Royal Ensemble of Persepolis founded by Darius I and built together with his son Xerxes. While Persepolis was built as an ‘intentional monument’ it had already become an ‘historic monument’ during the Achaemenid period. It maintained its symbolic significance in the following centuries even after its destruction by Alexander of Macedonia in 330 BC. The purpose of building Persepolis was to establish a symbol and a common reference for the peoples of the Empire with the Achaemenid Dynasty transmitting significant messages and values such as peace stability grandeur and praise for the dynastic figure of the king as the protector of values and fighting falsehood. While previous research on Achaemenid heritage has mainly been on archaeological and art-historical aspects of Persepolis the present work focuses on the architecture and design of Persepolis. It is supported by studies in the fields of archaeology history and art history as well as by direct survey of the site. The morphological analysis of Persepolis including the study of the proportions of the elevations and the verification of a planning grid for the layout of the entire ensemble demonstrate the univocal will by Darius to plan Persepolis following a precise initial scheme. The study shows how the inscriptions bas-reliefs and the innovative architectural language together express the symbolism values and political messages of the Achaemenid Dynasty exhibiting influence from different lands in a new architectural language and in the plan of the entire site. | The Concept of Monument in Achaemenid Empire

GBP 36.99
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Safety-II in Practice Developing the Resilience Potentials

Safety-II in Practice Developing the Resilience Potentials

Safety-I is defined as the freedom from unacceptable harm. The purpose of traditional safety management is therefore to find ways to ensure this ‘freedom’. But as socio-technical systems steadily have become larger and less tractable this has become harder to do. Resilience engineering pointed out from the very beginning that resilient performance - an organisation’s ability to function as required under expected and unexpected conditions alike – required more than the prevention of incidents and accidents. This developed into a new interpretation of safety (Safety-II) and consequently a new form of safety management. Safety-II changes safety management from protective safety and a focus on how things can go wrong to productive safety and a focus on how things can and do go well. For Safety-II the aim is not just the elimination of hazards and the prevention of failures and malfunctions but also how best to develop an organisation’s potentials for resilient performance – the way it responds monitors learns and anticipates. That requires models and methods that go beyond the Safety-I toolbox. This book introduces a comprehensive approach for the management of Safety-II called the Resilience Assessment Grid (RAG). It explains the principles of the RAG and how it can be used to develop the resilience potentials. The RAG provides four sets of diagnostic and formative questions that can be tailored to any organisation. The questions are based on the principles of resilience engineering and backed by practical experience from several domains. Safety-II in Practice is for both the safety professional and academic reader. For the professional it presents a workable method (RAG) for the management of Safety-II with a proven track record. For academic and student readers the book is a concise and practical presentation of resilience engineering. | Safety-II in Practice Developing the Resilience Potentials

GBP 31.99
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