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Imageability of cities: a study of maintaining the balance between the preservation of imageability and culture change with special reference to down

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dc.contributor.author Alahakoon, H
dc.date.accessioned 2011-03-24T10:53:36Z
dc.date.available 2011-03-24T10:53:36Z
dc.identifier.citation Alahakoon, H. (2002). Imageability of cities: a study of maintaining the balance between the preservation of imageability and culture change with special reference to down [Master's theses, University of Moratuwa]. Institutional Repository University of Moratuwa. http://dl.lib.mrt.ac.lk/handle/123/301
dc.identifier.uri http://dl.lib.mrt.ac.lk/handle/123/301
dc.description Degree : Final exam in MScitecture en_US
dc.description.abstract Man identifies the world in the form of images and these images intern build up his own world. Boulding (1965) describes the image as a mental picture which is a product of experience, attitudes , memories and immediate sensations, which further makes each individual to build a unique image different from another, even regarding a single thing , totally depending on his or her uniqueness of personality. Further these menial images are used to interpret information and to guide behavior, for it offers a relatively stable ordering of relationships between meaningful objects and concepts. A complex of images, such a combination of events, persons, characters and objects as a whole, form the phenomena called the environmental images. The environmental images are a two way process between the observer and the environment. That is; people with their ability to sense and perceive, build images, with in a unique frame work of immediate sensation and memory of past experience and the environment with a capacity of evoking images, stimulate the sensation of people, in building an image.
dc.format.extent vi, 124p. : ill., photos en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject ARCHITECTURE
dc.subject PRESERVATION
dc.title Imageability of cities: a study of maintaining the balance between the preservation of imageability and culture change with special reference to down
dc.identifier.faculty Architecture en_US
dc.identifier.degree MSc en_US
dc.identifier.department Department of Architecture en_US
dc.date.accept 2002-04
dc.identifier.accno 78154 en_US


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