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Browsing by Department "Departamento de arquitectura"

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    A critical assessment and projection Of urban vertical growth in Antofagasta, Chile
    (2013-01-01)
    Palme, Massimo  
    ;
    Ramírez, José Guerra
    Vertical cities’ growth is argument of discussion worldwide. Population increases and a better soil use are needed, in terms of efficiency and density, in many cities of the world. However, an excessive vertical growth seems to be harmful, especially near the green areas of midtowns. In this paper, the case of Antofagasta is studied. The paper studies different possible future evolutions searching for a bearable development, respecting the society needs and the environment. Parameters analyzed are: temperature, humidity, solar radiation, wind speed and direction in the studied area. Results show the impact of building growth in terms of overheating and wind reduction on the ground area studied. Additionally, the social impact of living in towers is also discussed in the paper, searching for better design in order to guarantee user’s comfort, satisfaction and stimulation in their residences. Thermal, visual and acoustical effects produced by towers are considered in the critical evaluation of the Antofagasta city evolution. Part of this work relates to architectural workshop “energy and architecture” conducted by the authors at the School of Architecture of the Catholic University of the North (UCN) in 2012.
    Scopus© Citations 17
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    A Hand-Drawn Language for Human-Robot Collaboration in Wood Stereotomy
    (2023-09-11)
    Aguilera-Carrasco, Cristhian A.
    ;
    Gonzalez-Bohme, Luis Felipe  
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    Valdes, Francisco
    ;
    Quitral-Zapata, Francisco Javier
    ;
    Raducanu, Bogdan
    This study introduces a novel, hand-drawn language designed to foster human-robot collaboration in wood stereotomy, central to carpentry and joinery professions. Based on skilled carpenters’ line and symbol etchings on timber, this language signifies the location, geometry of woodworking joints, and timber placement within a framework. A proof-of-concept prototype has been developed, integrating object detectors, keypoint regression, and traditional computer vision techniques to interpret this language and enable an extensive repertoire of actions. Empirical data attests to the language’s efficacy, with the successful identification of a specific set of symbols on various wood species’ sawn surfaces, achieving a mean average precision (mAP) exceeding 90%. Concurrently, the system can accurately pinpoint critical positions that facilitate robotic comprehension of carpenter-indicated woodworking joint geometry. The positioning error, approximately 3 pixels, meets industry standards.
    Scopus© Citations 1
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    A heat vulnerability index: Spatial patterns of exposure, sensitivity and adaptive capacity for Santiago de Chile
    (2016-09-01)
    Inostroza, Luis
    ;
    Palme, Massimo  
    ;
    De La Barrera, Francisco
    ;
    Jeffrey Shaman
    Climate change will worsen the high levels of urban vulnerability in Latin American cities due to specific environmental stressors. Some impacts of climate change, such as high temperatures in urban environments, have not yet been addressed through adaptation strategies, which are based on poorly supported data. These impacts remain outside the scope of urban planning. New spatially explicit approaches that identify highly vulnerable urban areas and include specific adaptation requirements are needed in current urban planning practices to cope with heat hazards. In this paper, a heat vulnerability index is proposed for Santiago, Chile. The index was created using a GIS-based spatial information system and was constructed from spatially explicit indexes for exposure, sensitivity and adaptive capacity levels derived from remote sensing data and socio-economic information assessed via principal component analysis (PCA). The objective of this study is to determine the levels of heat vulnerability at local scales by providing insights into these indexes at the intra city scale. The results reveal a spatial pattern of heat vulnerability with strong variations among individual spatial indexes. While exposure and adaptive capacities depict a clear spatial pattern, sensitivity follows a complex spatial distribution. These conditions change when examining PCA results, showing that sensitivity is more robust than exposure and adaptive capacity. These indexes can be used both for urban planning purposes and for proposing specific policies and measures that can help minimize heat hazards in highly dynamic urban areas. The proposed methodology can be applied to other Latin American cities to support policy making.
    Scopus© Citations 152
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    Bidding against each other: local procurement of personal protective equipment in the context of decentralization and high socio-economic inequality
    (2023-01-01)
    VALENZUELA LEVI, NICOLAS DARIO  
    ;
    Bordón, Paola
    ;
    Livert, Felipe
    ;
    Henríquez, Manuel
    Bajo la influencia del federalismo fiscal y las teorías de la descentralización gubernamental, una parte importante de los sistemas de salud de todo el mundo enfrentaron la pandemia de COVID-19 después de haber sido moldeados o reformados por procesos de transferencia de poderes de los gobiernos centrales a los locales. La adquisición de suministros clave es uno de los componentes que opera de manera descentralizada, lo que obliga a los gobiernos locales a competir entre sí. Este fue el origen de lo que se ha llamado las “guerras de licitaciones” entre gobiernos subnacionales al comienzo de la respuesta a la pandemia. Estas guerras llevaron a políticas de centralización en Estados Unidos, Reino Unido y la Unión Europea. Sin embargo, se sabe menos sobre los casos del sur global. Al analizar la adquisición de Equipos de Protección Personal (EPP) en 320 municipios chilenos encargados de la atención primaria de salud, esta investigación proporciona evidencia de los impactos de la competencia gubernamental horizontal en la capacidad de adquirir suministros clave. En Chile, durante la respuesta a la pandemia de 2020, los municipios más ricos pudieron adquirir más mascarillas por habitante, generándose con ello economías de escala que les permitieron acceder a precios más bajos, a diferencia de aquellos municipios con menores recursos. Los autores apoyan la noción teórica de “concurrencia” como un concepto que añade matices al debate sobre centralización-descentralización. En Chile, por ejemplo, si bien el testeo y la trazabilidad de casos SARS-CoV-2 requerían la descentralización de dichas funciones, las compras de EPP probablemente podrían haberse beneficiado de la centralización de los procesos de adquisición para evitar la reproducción de desigualdades territoriales.
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    Energy saving strategies and on-site power generation in a university building from a tropical climate
    (2021-01-02)
    Litardo, Jaqueline
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    Palme, Massimo  
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    Hidalgo-León, Rubén
    ;
    Amoroso, Fernando
    ;
    Soriano, Guillermo
    This paper compares the potential for building energy saving of various passive and active strategies and on-site power generation through a grid-connected solar photovoltaic system (SPVS). The case study is a student welfare unit from a university campus located in the tropical climate (Aw) of Guayaquil, Ecuador. The proposed approach aims to identify the most effective energy saving strategy for building retrofit in this climate. For this purpose, we modeled the base line of the building and proposed energy saving scenarios that were evaluated independently. All building simulations were done in OpenStudio-EnergyPlus, while the on-site power generation was carried out using the Homer PRO software. Results indicated that the incorporation of daylighting controls accounted for the highest energy savings of around 20% and 14% in total building energy consumption, and cooling loads, respectively. Also, this strategy provided a reduction of about 35% and 43% in total building energy consumption, and cooling loads, respectively, when combined with triple low-e coating glazing and active measures. On the other hand, the total annual electric energy delivered by the SPVS (output power converter) was 66,590 kWh, from where 48,497 kWh was supplied to the building while the remaining electricity was injected into the grid.
    Scopus© Citations 18
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    Evaluating thermal comfort in a naturally conditioned office in a temperate climate zone
    (2016-07-20)
    Gallardo, Andrés  
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    Palme, Massimo  
    ;
    Lobato-Cordero, Andrea
    ;
    Beltrán, R. David
    ;
    Gaona, Gabriel
    This study aims to determine the optimal approach for evaluating thermal comfort in an office that uses natural ventilation as the main conditioning strategy; the office is located in Quito-Ecuador. The performance of the adaptive model included in CEN Standard EN15251 and the traditional PMV model are compared with reports of thermal environment satisfaction surveys presented simultaneously to all occupants of the office to determine which of the two comfort models is most suitable to evaluate the thermal environment. The results indicate that office occupants have developed some degree of adaptation to the climatic conditions of the city where the office is located (which only demands heating operation), and tend to accept and even prefer lower operative temperatures than those considered optimum by applying the PMV model. This is an indication that occupants of naturally conditioned buildings are usually able to match their comfort temperature to their normal environment. Therefore, the application of the adaptive model included in CEN Standard EN15251 seems like the optimal approach for evaluating thermal comfort in naturally conditioned buildings, because it takes into consideration the adaptive principle that indicates that if a change occurs such as to produce discomfort, people tend to react in ways which restore their comfort.
    Scopus© Citations 30
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    Key Parameters for Urban Heat Island Assessment in A Mediterranean Context: A Sensitivity Analysis Using the Urban Weather Generator Model
    (2017-11-04)
    Salvati, Agnese
    ;
    Palme, Massimo  
    ;
    Inostroza, Luis
    Although Urban Heat Island (UHI) is a fundamental effect modifying the urban climate, being widely studied, the relative weight of the parameters involved in its generation is still not clear. This paper investigates the hierarchy of importance of eight parameters responsible for UHI intensity in the Mediterranean context. Sensitivity analyses have been carried out using the Urban Weather Generator model, considering the range of variability of: 1) city radius, 2) urban morphology, 3) tree coverage, 4) anthropogenic heat from vehicles, 5) building’s cooling set point, 6) heat released to canyon from HVAC systems, 7) wall construction properties and 8) albedo of vertical and horizontal surfaces. Results show a clear hierarchy of significance among the considered parameters; the urban morphology is the most important variable, causing a relative change up to 120% of the annual average UHI intensity in the Mediterranean context. The impact of anthropogenic sources of heat such as cooling systems and vehicles is also significant. These results suggest that urban morphology parameters can be used as descriptors of the climatic performance of different urban areas, easing the work of urban planners and designers in understanding a complex physical phenomenon, such as the UHI.
    Scopus© Citations 33
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    Mixed Reality for Safe and Reliable Human-Robot Collaboration in Timber Frame Construction
    (2023-08-01)
    González-Böhme, Luis Felipe  
    ;
    Valenzuela-Astudillo, Eduardo
    In the field of construction, human-robot collaboration and mixed reality (MR) open new possibilities. However, safety and reliability issues persist. The lack of flexibility and adaptability in current preprogrammed systems hampers real-time human-robot collaboration. A key gap in this area lies in the ability of the robot to interpret and accurately execute operations based on the real-time visual instructions and restrictions provided by the human collaborator and the working environment. This paper focuses on an MR-based human-robot collaboration method through visual feedback from a vision-based collaborative industrial robot system for use in wood stereotomy which we are developing. This method is applied to an alternating workflow in which a skilled carpenter lays out the joinery on the workpiece, and the robot cuts it. Cutting operations are instructed to the robot only through lines and conventional “carpenter’s marks”, which are drawn on the timbers by the carpenter. The robot system’s accuracy in locating and interpreting marks as cutting operations is evaluated by automatically constructing a 3D model of the cut shape from the vision system data. A digital twin of the robot allows the carpenter to previsualize all motions that are required by the robot for task validation and to know when to enter the collaborative workspace. Our experimental results offer some insights into human-robot communication requirements for collaborative robot system applications in timber frame construction.
    Scopus© Citations 2
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    Natural Ventilation: A Mitigation Strategy to Reduce Overheating in Buildings under Urban Heat Island Effect in South American Cities
    (2017-11-04)
    Palme, Massimo  
    ;
    Carrasco, Claudio
    ;
    Ángel Gálvez, Miguel
    ;
    Inostroza, Luis
    Urban heat island effect often produces an increase of overheating sensation inside of buildings. To evacuate this heat, the current use of air conditioning increases the energy consumption of buildings. As a good alternative, natural ventilation is one of the best strategies to obtain indoor comfort conditions, even in summer season, if buildings and urban designs are appropriated. In this work, the overheating risk of a small house is evaluated in four South American cities: Guayaquil, Lima, Antofagasta and Valparaíso, with and without considering the UHI effect. Then, natural ventilation is assessed in order to understand the capability of this passive strategy to assure comfort inside the house. Results show that an important portion of the indoor heat can be evacuated, however the temperature rising (especially during the night) due to UHI can generate a saturation effect if appropriate technical solutions, like the increase in the air speed that can be obtained with good urban design, are not considered.
    Scopus© Citations 10
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    REVIEW OF “LIGHTENED SLIPSTRAW CEILINGS” AS A CULTURAL PRACTICE IN THE VERNACULAR ROOFING OF AYMARA HOUSES IN ARICA AND PARINACOTA, CHILE
    (2023-12-31)
    Alfaro-Malatesta, Sergio
    ;
    Palme, Massimo  
    ;
    Cohen-Herrera, Jocelyn
    Este artículo trata acerca de la caracterización de la tecnología de un cielo raso de paja y barro denominada en lengua aymara como “caruna”. El estudio se realizó en viviendas Aymaras a más de 4.000 metros sobre el nivel del mar en la localidad de Tacora, en la región de Arica y Parinacota, Chile. El estudio forma parte del proyecto 49204 financiado por el Servicio Nacional del Patrimonio Cultural. Su objetivo es rescatar esta técnica vernácula como alternativa a los materiales industrializados que han modificado la vivienda andina y la calidad de vida en climas extremos durante los últimos 25 años. Se recogieron muestras de los materiales utilizados en esta técnica, reproducida por un cultor local, y se analizaron en laboratorio para determinar sus propiedades térmicas y de trabajabilidad. Además, se monitoreó el desempeño energético de tres viviendas en el poblado de Tacora para comparar los resultados obtenidos con los de los laboratorios. Los hallazgos revelaron que la matriz de barro utilizada en esta técnica de encielado es predominantemente arcillosa con mediana compresibilidad y baja conductividad térmica, lo que la hace adecuada como aislante en climas desérticos fríos. El cielo de barro y paja alivianado se destacó por su presencia en la cultura local, la disponibilidad de recursos materiales y su facilidad de instalación. Este estudio subraya la importancia de preservar el conocimiento tradicional, respetando los saberes ancestrales y mejorando el desempeño térmico de las viviendas en la cordillera norte de Chile, Perú y Bolivia, destacando su relevancia para el desarrollo de soluciones habitacionales sostenibles y culturalmente pertinentes.
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    Robustness of residential houses in Ecuador in the face of global warming: Prototyping and simulation studies in the Amazon, coastal and Andes macroclimatic regions
    (2017-01-01)
    Palme, Massimo  
    ;
    Lobato, Andrea
    Ecuador is starting to consider climate change as a priority for the country development. Recently, was founded the Sub-secretariat for climate change, and many Ministry started to insert related topic in the political agenda. Particularly, Urban Development and Housing Ministry, MIDUVI, launched in 2011 the competition “Dwellings for climate change” in order to improve the basic social house that is still constructing in all the climates of the country. For instance, Ecuador, even small, has a unique climatic diversity: in the Andes the climate is tropical mountain, in the Amazons is tropical wet and in the Coast is hot, both arid and humid, depending on the specific position. One of the competition goals was to put in evidence the need of different design for each climate, even for social dwellings, that have to be very cheap. The National Institute of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (INER) is also developing some prototypes for the different climates of Ecuador [1]. In this paper, a simulation study has been conducted in order to estimate the discomfort hours (both undercooling and overheating) that inhabitants could feel in the base case (the actual MIDUVI social house) and in the three competition winner prototypes. Simulations have been conducted for the climate of nowadays (Typical Meteorological Year –TMY) and for the future (2050 and 2080) taking into account the global warming effect under the Intergovernmental Panel for Climate Change (IPCC) A2 scenario. Because of in Ecuador heating and air-conditioning systems are used only by a small part of the population (the richer one), the analysis was conducted thinking in naturally ventilated buildings, searching for the total discomfort hours during the year.
    Scopus© Citations 1
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    Sustainability and urban metabolism
    (2020-01-01)
    Palme, Massimo  
    ;
    Salvati, Agnese
    The concept of urban metabolism was introduced by Wolman in 1965 [1], following insights and suggestions coming from ancient Marxism and the early ecologist theories.
    Scopus© Citations 2
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    Technological Imagination to Stay Within Planetary Boundaries
    (2023-04-01)
    Palme, Massimo  
    Technological imagination has been, until now, a stronger driver of development and has permitted to scale economy and even to obtain increasing returns of investments. However, times are a changing. Humanity faces now societal and environmental changes that are pushing the planet Earth toward a danger zone, overpassing recommended limits for several critical processes, such as bio-geochemical fluxes of nitrogen and phosphorus, greenhouse gases concentration in the atmosphere, biodiversity loss and land use change. The role of technology applied to built environment design should be redefined to stay within the so-called safe operation space for humanity, considering the limited resources we have and the need of low-energy solutions for buildings and cities. This chapter introduces the key concepts for the understanding the new role that we must assign to technological imagination to face the challenge of the Anthropocene epoch and discusses how to achieve the seven transitions objectives for transforming our world in a sustainable way.
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    Technological imagination to stay within planetary boundaries. Seven necessary transitions
    (2023-01-01)
    Palme, Massimo  
    Technological imagination and innovation processes have always been at the basis of economic growth and the expansion of human domination over other species. Nevertheless, something seems to have got stuck. Can the leaps in technological development that make it possible to “reset” the clock to start growing again in a sustained form really be infinite? Or are we facing something different, a limit in the structural stability of the ecosystem itself? The worsening of the polycrisis – certainly also energetic – will require drastic solutions but should also finally allow the (re)emergence of radical ideas of renewal and transformation, as well as concrete proposals for spatial organisation associated with the new lifestyles they prefigure.
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    The possible shift between heating and cooling demand of buildings under climate change conditions: Are some mitigation policies wrongly understood?
    (2017-01-01)
    Palme, Massimo  
    Global warming affects the built environment by changing the environmental conditions under which buildings operate. This change probably means a shift in thermal demand, from a predominant demand for heating to a higher demand for cooling in many climates. For instance, in cold climates global warming seems to be a self-decreasing phenomenon because of lower energy demand in warmer environments. In warmer climates, like the Mediterranean, and in the hottest climates (both humid and arid), global warming must be regarded as one of the main factors (the others are the change in comfort standards and the heat-island effect) in increasing the energy demand to cool buildings. This chapter analyses the environment of various cities, characterised by mild average temperatures and small thermal oscillations, that can be regarded as Mediterranean climate emplacements. Today these cities have more heating than cooling demand but in the future will probably have higher cooling requirements. Results show that by 2050, in most of the considered emplacements, cooling demand will be higher than heating demand and emissions will rise proportionally. Solutions to this problem must be sought in the flexible operation of buildings, and policies should focus on summer-related issues: good natural ventilation, protection from the sun, and internal gain reduction, rather than insulation, air infiltration reduction and solar access.
    Scopus© Citations 2
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    The rich and mobility: A new look into the impacts of income inequality on household transport expenditures
    (2021-01-01)
    VALENZUELA LEVI, NICOLAS DARIO  
    An increasing interest in transport affordability has brought attention to the factors driving household transport expenditure. Existent income inequality is part of what drives this interest. However, the possible causal link between income distribution and household transport expenditure is scarcely studied in the literature. In addition, the few existing studies only focus on post-tax income distribution. This paper provides the first known analysis that includes both pre-tax and post-tax income distribution, and a specific focus on the richest one percent. Random effects regressions and instrumental variables are used to analyse panel data covering 14 OECD countries during the 1992–2016 period. Inequality has an effect on overall household transport expenditure, and more specifically on purchase of vehicles and operation of private transport equipment. The pre-tax share of the rich increases overall expenditure on purchases of new private vehicles, with a decreasing effect when market inequality is high. The post-tax share of the poor has an effect on operation of transport equipment, but the sign of this effect depends on the existent level of post-tax inequality.
    Scopus© Citations 6
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    The right to connection: Imaginaries, struggles, rights and institutions
    (2016-01-01)
    Valenzuela-Levi, Nicolás  
    If in order to claim a right it is necessary first to imagine its possibility, then the construction of new imaginaries could have political effects. For this to be feasible, however, such an imaginary must develop from existing conditions. Based on this premise, this paper discusses the possibility of understanding connectivity as a right, based on specific cases arisen in Latin America in recent years.
    Scopus© Citations 1
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    Urban Heat Island of Valparaíso, Chile - A Comparison between 2007 and 2016
    (2017-11-04)
    Carrasco, Claudio
    ;
    PALME , MASSIMO  
    ;
    Angel Galvez, Miguel
    ;
    Inostroza, Luis
    ;
    Padilla, Uriel
    ;
    Fonseca, Andrés
    The urban heat island phenomenon shows that the city changes the climate of the planet and affects it negatively by favouring the global warming. Urban morphology and city metabolism defines this behaviour. The city of Valparaíso, Chile, located in coastal Mediterranean climate in southern hemisphere is a city with around 295,000 inhabitants. In this research, the differences between UHI phenomenon in winters of 2007 and 2016 are evaluated. The city presented a temperature difference of 4.6 °C between the outskirts and the urban centre as a manifestation of this phenomenon, in 2007. By 2016 the city in population not increases and has had small morphological variations; the city presents an average temperature difference of 5.2 ° C between the outskirts and the urban centre as manifestation of urban heat island. This higher temperature occurs in the higher density built area, mainly of offices buildings. Here is the highest density of metabolic activity of the city, same as 2007.
    Scopus© Citations 3
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    Waste Political Settlements in Colombia and Chile: Power, Inequality and Informality in Recycling
    (2020-07-01)
    Valenzuela-Levi, Nicolás  
    ABSTRACTThere are stark differences between the waste recycling literature from the global North and that from the global South. The literature from the global North tends to focus on empirical analyses of existing municipal recycling services and rarely considers institutional factors. When it does, the theoretical approaches adopted are limited, especially regarding the role of informal institutions. In contrast, recycling literature from the global South does focus on informal institutions, but it does so by concentrating on the struggles of waste pickers rather than on the performance of waste management services provided by local authorities. This divergence in the literature suggests the need for an analytical framework that integrates institutions and recycling performance. This article analyses waste disposal regimes in two Latin American metropolitan areas, Medellín (Colombia) and Santiago (Chile), and explores the link between income inequality and recycling. It focuses on the political settlements that lie at the heart of the waste regimes. As such, waste regimes in these two cities are understood to be a product of the interplay of balances of power, institutions and distribution of benefits. The study also highlights the need to understand informal institutions as relational phenomena that affect both the rich and the poor, and not just as a subsistence strategy by the latter.
    Scopus© Citations 15

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