"The Happiest Place on Earth", Design Perspectives, 1, 6/2004. Slessor, Catherine, Contemporary Doorways Architectural Entrances, Transitions and Thresholds, 64-65, 2002. "Advanced Studios", Constructs, 7: 1, 20, Fall 2004. "Spring Lectures", Constructs, 7: 1, 19, Fall 2004. Lloyd, Meghan, "Downtown L.A.", Constructs, 7: 1, 13, Fall 2004. Joyce, Nancy E., Building Stata: The Design and Construction of Frank O. Friedrich, Jan, "Zentralbank am Main: der Wettbewerb für die EZB in Frankfurt", Bauwelt, 95: 13, 14-25.
#Pcad 2001 forum series
Lubell, Sam, "Goldberger hosts new series at Parsons", Architectural Record, 48, 1/2005. Kamin, Blair, "Jay Pritzker, Pavilion, Chicago", Architectural Record, 193: 1, 136-145, 1/2005. Campbell, Robert, FAIA, "Why a duck? Why not an electronic billboard? A Campus debate rages again", Architectural Record, 192: 7, 61-64, 7/2004. Rogers, Christina, "Designers develop alternatives to Gehry's Brooklyn plans", Architectural Record, 192: 7, 28, 7/2004. Gehry's paean to rock'n'rolls rebellion", Architectural Record, 126-137, 8/2000. Russell, James S., "A Marriage of money, technology, youth culture, and glitz, the Experience Music Project is Frank O. Czarnecki, John, "Gehry designs Biloxi "mad pot-Ohr" museum", Architectural Record, 189: 8, 31, 08/2001. Bowen, Ted Smalley, "MIT's Stata Cente opens, raising issues about cost control", Architectural Record, 192: 6, 50, 6/2004. Milionis, Allison, "Glare report prompts alterations to Disney Concert Hall", Architectural Record, 193: 1, 30, 1/2005. "Will Chicago's long-awaited Millennium Park be fine art or spectacle? Perhaps a little of both", Architectural Record, 192: 5, 61-62, 64, 5/2004. "Brace yourself for Skilling's next evolution", Architectural Record, 191: 3, 22, 03/2003. Russell, James S., "San Geminiano for science, Gehry Partners'Stata Center nurtures a research culture ready to cross the fast-dissolving boundaries of knowledge", Architectural Record, 98-111, 8/2004. Venice Gateway Project, Venice, Los Angeles, CA Samsung Museum of Modern Art Project, South Korea Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, PA New York Times Headquarters Competition Project Museo de la Diversidad, Panama City, Panama Miyake, Issey, Store, Tribeca, New York, NY Minden-Ravensburg Electricity Company (EMR) Forum Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Stata, Ray and Maria, Center for Computer, Information and Intelligence Sciences, Cambridge, MA Le Clos Jordan Winery, Lincoln, ON, Canada Hotel Marques de Rascal, Elciego, Álava, Spain The findings are considered in the context of global barriers and facilitators for healthy public policy.Bard College, Performing Arts Center, Annandale-on-Hudson, NYīrooklyn Nets Stadium Project, Brooklyn, NYĭisney, Walt, Concert Hall, Downtown, Los Angeles, CAĮuropaische Zentralbank Stage II Project, Frankfurt, Germany This article explores globalization processes, the food environment, and dietary health outcomes in SSA through the use of trend analyses and structural equation modelling. Higher profit margins on processed foods have promoted the creation of ‘obesogenic’ environments, which through progressively integrated global food systems have been increasingly ‘exported’ to developing nations. Reduced barriers to trade have eased the importation of such commodities, while investment liberalization has increased corporate consolidation over global and domestic food chains. Urbanization carries potential health benefits due to improved access to an increased variety of food imports, although for the growing number of urban poor, this has often meant increased reliance on cheap, highly processed food commodities. There are three dominant globalization pathways affecting noncommunicable diseases in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA): urbanization, trade liberalization, and investment liberalization.