Buildings
in sentence
1048 examples of Buildings in a sentence
That's what happens to
buildings.
Even the most durable and intactable buildings, like the pyramids of Giza, are in bad shape when you look up close.
They had to figure out whether they wanted to continue to be an architecture firm and focus on the construction of
buildings
or pivot and become the hot new thing, a design firm, focusing on beyond the construction of spaces.
So imagine where a traditional urban master plan, you typically draw the street grid where the cars can drive and the building plots where you can put some
buildings.
And even then, you know, because the
buildings
get warm in the daytime, and they keep it a little warmer at night.
But there were lots of other things going on in this area: it was a kind of construction zone; a lot of
buildings
were going up.
Because in an era where we design
buildings
to last 30, maybe 60 years, I would love to learn how to create something that could entertain for an eternity.
That doesn't happen very often, but it happened to me in the year 2000, when for some reason or another, a whole pile of different architects started to ask me to design the insides of theaters with them, where I would take environmental graphics and work them into
buildings.
They ran around corners, they went up sides of buildings, and they melded into the architecture.
Yeah, he jumps out of
buildings.
Say you improved your transport footprint or cut energy waste in your
buildings.
You know, like lots of generations moving to the Back of the Yards, the family did the thankless hidden jobs that most people didn't want to do: cleaning office buildings, preparing airline meals in cold factories, meat packing, demolitions.
The settlement is remarkably well- organized, with administrative buildings, officers’ quarters, and even schools, as Cossacks prize literacy.
They graffitied
buildings
and braved trains swarming with Gestapo.
And the study showed that, compared to other buildings, there is a reduced incidence of eye irritation by 52 percent, respiratory systems by 34 percent, headaches by 24 percent, lung impairment by 12 percent and asthma by nine percent.
And also a reduction in energy requirements in
buildings
by an outstanding 15 percent, because you need less fresh air.
40 percent of the world's energy is taken up by
buildings
currently, and 60 percent of the world's population will be living in
buildings
in cities with a population of over one million in the next 15 years.
So I bring together the materials I find around me, I gather them to try and create experiences, immersive experiences that occupy rooms, that occupy walls, landscapes,
buildings.
So the plane landed in between the
buildings
and got to a full stop in front of this little billboard.
Now, when you go through a similar analysis for every way we use oil, including buildings, industry, feedstocks and so on, you find that of the 28 million barrels a day the government says we will need in 2025, well, about eight of that can be removed by efficiency by then, with another seven still being saved as the vehicle stocks turn over, at an average cost of only 12 bucks a barrel, instead of 26 for buying the oil.
But after getting older, we built more and more modern
buildings.
Why are modern
buildings
and cities full of these boxy shapes?
And nature never repeats itself, so now we have two
buildings
that can dance together.
So in the modern city, my question is: Is there a way that we don't separate
buildings
and nature, but combine them?
It's different, very different from the surrounding buildings, because other
buildings
are trying to build a wall around the nature.
But when we think about building smarter environments, think of smarter
buildings
or smarter cars or smarter clothing, that typically means adding more power, more batteries, more devices, more cost, more complexity and ultimately more failure.
By actively encouraging surface interactions with healthy microbes, we could improve passive climate control, stormwater management and even reduce CO2 emissions by lowering the energy used to heat or cool our
buildings.
These one or two story structures, designed to yield only enough income to cover the taxes on the land on which they stand, were not meant to be permanent
buildings.
I watched nearly half of the
buildings
in my neighborhood burn down.
Residents were often given less than a month's notice before their
buildings
were razed.
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