Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Copper_in_architecture> ?p ?o }
- Copper_in_architecture abstract "Copper has earned a respected place in the related fields of architecture, building construction, and interior design. From cathedrals to castles and from homes to offices, copper is used for a variety of architectural elements, including roofs, flashings, gutters, downspouts, domes, spires, vaults, wall cladding, and building expansion joints.The history of copper in architecture can be linked to its durability, corrosion resistance, prestigious appearance, and ability to form complex shapes. For centuries, craftsmen and designers utilized these attributes to build aesthetically pleasing and long-lasting building systems.For the past quarter century, copper has been designed into a much wider range of buildings, incorporating new styles, varieties of colors, and different shapes and textures. Copper clad walls are a modern design element in both indoor and outdoor environments.Some of the world's most distinguished modern architects have relied on copper. Examples include Frank Lloyd Wright, who specified copper materials in all of his building projects; Michael Graves, an AIA Gold Medalist who designed over 350 buildings worldwide; Renzo Piano, who designed pre-patinated clad copper for the NEMO-Metropolis Museum of Science in Amsterdam; Malcolm Holzman, whose patinated copper shingles at the WCCO Television Communications Centre made the facility an architectural standout in Minneaoplis; and Marianne Dahlbäck and Göran Månsson, who designed the Vasa Museum, a prominent feature of Stockholm’s skyline, with 12,000-square metres copper cladding. Architect Frank O. Gehry’s enormous copper fish sculpture atop the Vila Olimpica in Barcelona is an example of the artistic use of copper.Copper’s most famous trait is its display from a bright metallic colour to iridescent brown to near black and finally to a greenish verdigris patina. Architects describe the array of browns as russet, chocolate, plum, mahogany, and ebony. The metal’s distinctive green patina has long been coveted by architects and designers.This article describes practical and aesthetic benefits of copper in architecture as well as its use in exterior applications, interior design elements, and green buildings.".
- Copper_in_architecture thumbnail Copper_cladded_building_on_Yifei_Originality_Street,_Shanghai,_PRC.jpg?width=300.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageExternalLink Approved_products).''.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageID "35850269".
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageLength "86004".
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageOutDegree "304".
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageRevisionID "681829731".
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Acid_rain.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Acrylate_polymer.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Alkali.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Alkaline.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Alkalinity.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Alkyd.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Aluminium.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Aluminum.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Amen-Re.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Ammonia.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Ammonium_chloride.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Ammonium_sulfate.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Amsterdam.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Amun.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Egypt.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Rome.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Antimicrobial.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Antimicrobial_copper-alloy_touch_surfaces.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Antimicrobial_properties_of_copper.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Architecture.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Asphalt.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Asphalt_shingle.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Atmosphere.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Bacteria.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Bacterial.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Barcelona.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Beeswax.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Bending.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Bethlehem.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Bitumen.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Bituminous.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Brass.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Brazing.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Bronze.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Bronze_sculpture.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Brundtland_Commission.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Building_construction.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Building_material.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Building_materials.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Butyl.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink CAT-scan.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink CT_scan.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Carbon_emissions.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Carnauba_wax.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Cartridge_brass.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Castle.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Castor_oil.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Architectural_design.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Architectural_elements.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Copper.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Corrosion.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Domes.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Roofing_materials.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Roofs.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sustainable_architecture.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Cathedral.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Cathedral_of_Florence.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Chemical_industry.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Chemical_manufacturing.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Church_of_the_Nativity.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Clay.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Coast.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Commercial_bronze.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Concrete.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Constantinople.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Construction.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Coping_(architecture).
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Copper.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Copper(I)_chloride.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Copper_cladding.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Copper_in_architecture.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Copper_in_energy-efficient_motors.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Copper_in_energy_efficient_motors.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Copper_oxide.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Cornice.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Corrode.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Corrosion.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Corrosion_resistance.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Counter_top.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Countertop.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Creep_(deformation).
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Cuprous_chloride.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Curtain_wall_(architecture).
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Dome.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Door_handle.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Doorknob.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Downcycle.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Downcycling.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Downspout.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Drag_(physics).
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Ductility.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Educational_film.
- Copper_in_architecture wikiPageWikiLink Electric_field.