enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Contextual architecture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contextual_architecture

    Frank Lloyd Wright's Fallingwater was designed to emulate the site's existing natural features. Contextual architecture, also known as Contextualism is a philosophical approach in architectural theory that refers to the designing of a structure in response to the literal and abstract characteristics of the environment in which it is built.

  3. Resaca (channel) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resaca_(channel)

    The second explanation is that the word stems from the Spanish word resacar (to retake). The latter is the most plausible explanation given that the primary geological function of a resaca is to divert and dissipate floodwater from the river. [2] The word resaca is a regionalism. Elsewhere, these are referred to as oxbow lakes.

  4. Contextualism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Contextualism

    Contextualism, also known as epistemic contextualism, is a family of views in philosophy which emphasize the context in which an action, utterance, or expression occurs. Proponents of contextualism argue that, in some important respect, the action, utterance, or expression can only be understood relative to that context. [ 1 ]

  5. Thomas L. Schumacher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_L._Schumacher

    Thomas L Schumacher (1941–2009) was an American academic architect and a Fellow of the American Academy in Rome.He was well known throughout the architecture community for his role in the development of Contextualism, along with Colin Rowe, under whom he studied at Cornell; and for his expertise in rationalist Italian architecture.

  6. Texas Highland Lakes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Texas_Highland_Lakes

    Lake Buchanan, the largest of the Texas Highland Lakes. The Texas Highland Lakes are a chain of fresh water reservoirs in Central Texas formed by dams on the lower Colorado River. [1] The Texas Colorado River winds southeast from West Texas to Matagorda Bay and the Gulf of Mexico. The lower Colorado River basin has a history of major flooding.

  7. Colin Rowe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colin_Rowe

    Colin Rowe (27 March 1920 – 5 November 1999) was a British-born, American-naturalised architectural historian, critic, theoretician and teacher. He is acknowledged to have been a major theoretical and critical influence in the second half of the twentieth century on world architecture and urbanism.

  8. Caddo Lake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caddo_Lake

    The Channel was used by steamboats to reach the port at Jefferson, until water levels fell after the removal of the Great Raft.. Caddo Lake has been used by Native Americans for hundreds of years, but substantial commercial development would only begin with invention of the steamboat and US annexation of Louisiana and Texas by treaty (Texas is the only State in the United States to have joined ...

  9. Chain of Lakes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chain_of_Lakes

    Chain of Lakes Middle School, a public middle school in Windermere, Florida; Chain of Lakes Park, a baseball stadium in Winter Haven, Florida used by the Cleveland Indians for spring training; Chain O'Lakes State Park (Indiana), in northeast Indiana