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فسيلة - transplant
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هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات
It is a digital library containing thousands of Arabic videos in all fields.
قوائم تشغيل فسيلة
https://www.dailymotion.com/fasela/playlists
Category
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LearningTranscript
00:02music
00:05music
00:06music
00:08I'm not asking about the boats
00:11Okay, you're going to be in a hurry.
00:12Oh my God, I'm here.
00:13You left the concrete pouring and started drinking tea.
00:14I don't want to take drugs
00:16music
00:16music
00:17I'm not interested in what you're drinking.
00:18Well, since you're not interested, I'm generally a drug user.
00:21Who is standing on the concrete slab just now?
00:23Who stood on the boy, what, what?
00:24The number of artificial zakat currencies
00:26And she's doing the work for me now.
00:28What is this, Bayant?
00:29No, honestly, I'm just messing with you to finish the tea.
00:31So what will you do when you finish the cup?
00:33I'll make him another cup of tea.
00:35Is that how it is?
00:36Look, engineer
00:37What job here, and what project?
00:40In the space of human activity
00:42They call it March of Safety
00:44Any skilled engineer takes the negligence factor into account in their calculations.
00:47Meaning
00:48This means Shaker code and the Egyptian code
00:50Which book did you study in college?
00:53Take my sitting position into account
00:54I am human error.
00:57I'm not in my job anymore
00:58In reverse
00:59When I don't do my job
01:02The job is going slowly.
01:04Someone had to use it
01:08So what's the end result for these tea workers?
01:10What does this mean? What's the delay in your work on the site?
01:13I'll finish it and move on to the next project.
01:15I'm also finishing the cup.
01:17And make the next cup
01:19Think of me as something like
01:21Greek myth
01:22Sisyphus
01:23But instead of the rock
01:25I chose a bridal shawl
01:29Metwally? I have to fire you from your job.
01:31We provided Bash Mwand Al-Salat
01:33But I remember
01:35If you dismiss Metwally
01:37Hey, Badlo
01:39Alif Metwally
01:46What's going on?
01:50It might not be exactly familiar.
01:52But two might come
01:53Why is it not majoomish?
01:54What should I watch?
01:57Well, I'm working here, oh
02:03music
02:06Dear viewers
02:07Welcome to a new episode of the Dabke program, Sahla Warkato
02:09On the 18th of April, 1906
02:11Specifically at 5:12 AM
02:13California will experience an earthquake
02:16The earthquake will be over
02:1745 seconds to 60 seconds
02:19That's the concern, Abu Hamid.
02:21That's from the quarter
02:22The religious programs are small
02:24But its impact will last for decades.
02:27This earthquake will cause a terrifying rift.
02:29A long crack in the ground
02:30Its length reaches 477 kilometers
02:33This is an approximate distance from Cairo Al-Gharqad
02:35Five hours of travel without a driver
02:36According to some sources
02:3780% of the city of San Francisco
02:40Buried
02:403000 people died
02:42And 200,000 were displaced
02:43Of course, of course, Abu Hamid
02:44My crack of this size will definitely cause a lot of people to have an increase
02:47Let's surprise you, my dear
02:48And your statement regarding the matter
02:49The destruction that occurred
02:51It didn't come from the earthquake or from the crack that appeared in the ground.
02:53The damage was caused by the heat
02:56Her city was mostly made of wood, its houses
02:58And wood, as you know and have surely seen it
03:01Try a flammable substance
03:02The earthquake lasted no more than sixty seconds.
03:05This resulted in a prolonged period of heat and congestion in the city for three days.
03:09While everyone will see this earthquake as a disaster
03:11There's one person, my dear, who will see an opportunity in it.
03:13And what's up, my dear?
03:14This is the inventor Thomas Edison
03:16What's this, Abu Hamid Edison of the energy-saving light bulbs?
03:18What does he have to do with the earthquake?
03:19Let my friend tell you what Edison had to do with it.
03:211892
03:22Thomas Edison will announce that he will dominate the field of industrial lighting and electric aircraft.
03:26He directs his genius towards a new idea.
03:29A smarter and more impressive idea
03:31To the point that people forget about the lightbulb and remember it
03:33Let's, my dear, make the leader a rice dish that will make people forget about koshari.
03:36Initially, Thomas Edison would start a mining and raw materials company.
03:40But he will notice that during the mining process there is a large amount of wasted sand
03:44And here he will think instead of this great waste
03:46What do you think of it?
03:47Why do we supply this waste to cement factories?
03:50After that, he says that, ta-ta-ta-ta-ta-ta
03:51Well, I'm not being greedy in the cement industry.
03:53Because this is a very serious industry
03:55But thank you, its price will reach, and reach, and reach, and reach
03:57This topic requires someone experienced and astute like him to shed light on it.
04:01Here, my dear Thomas Edison Helsinki, is the subject of his inventions, science, electricity, and all that stuff.
04:06He'll get it into his head that he's a contractor
04:08He'll wear a galabiya and a keffiyeh and start banging on it like that
04:10He decided to dedicate his life to cement.
04:12Does he tell you, my dear, that Thomas Edison alone would have presented 49 patents in cement?
04:17What is cement, Dean? It has 49 parts.
04:19No, this is full of problems.
04:20Edison also deals with things like water-resistant cement treatment and coating tools.
04:24Keep that in mind, his cement mill in New Jersey, which is 150 feet long, will be twice as large as any
04:30A cement mill that was second to none in its time
04:32Edison's inventions truly revolutionized industry.
04:35Not only that, Edison's ambitions were much broader than that.
04:37Edison will decide to think outside the box and use the earthquake to promote the idea of Diamond Production.
04:43Large-scale production of cement houses
04:45Unlike wooden houses, they can withstand any danger such as fires, earthquakes, mold, termites, and also offer increased safety compared to other houses.
04:52Wood instead of any carpenter, something that goes into the leg
04:54One second, Abu Hamad, you're talking about the beginning of the twentieth century and about complex work like building houses.
04:59And also the cement industry, the industry is something they understand, but it has a large production capacity, and they say it's good.
05:04What I'm telling you is that Adusson will present a revolutionary idea at that time.
05:07The Single Molding Operation
05:10The house will be built all at once, with a single pour of concrete thrown into a giant iron mold.
05:14You won't just be working on the walls, but you'll be shaping every detail in the house.
05:18Stairs, chairs, heaters, and swimming pools
05:21The entire house is formed using a magic mold that dries, and its price does not exceed $1200.
05:27What a beautiful house, Abu Hamad! A house built in 4 hours? Don't tell me that, because I want to see the results!
05:30What is this?
05:31My dear, scientifically this idea was indeed feasible.
05:33What you see in front of you is, for example, a concrete house built by Edison in New Jersey.
05:37And with time, he proved his worth, and this is his picture from 2015.
05:40They're giving it a good deal, it just needs a little refreshing.
05:42But my friend, I tell you that all the details in the cement are exactly as Edson imagined them.
05:47From the roof to the stairs, it's right in front of you.
05:49He said, "No, don't worry, Abu Hamad, if the matter is resolved like this."
06:01If you design and build it
06:02Furthermore, the construction contractors found themselves needing 2300 pieces of formwork.
06:08It will cost $175,000
06:11Wait, I'm not finished yet.
06:13Today's figures mean $2.5 million.
06:16Of course, my dear, there's no resisting this liquidity.
06:19Otherwise, he wouldn't be a fighter.
06:20And here Edusson will try his best in marketing
06:22He's doing his first shows in Chicago and New Orleans
06:25To cut a foundation made of cement and write on it defiantly
06:30Please come closer and help me with my need.
06:32All of this, my dear, is so that people can get closer, feel reassured, and understand his idea a little.
06:35So that he can move forward at some point
06:37He attracts investors who will help him realize his idea.
06:40But, my dear, the offers failed.
06:41Edwson will try to prove his genius in the bonnet.
06:43He traveled by way of his company
06:44The one that will undertake giant projects like the Staddle Yankees in 1922
06:47But my dear, it was difficult at that time for anyone to invest in the idea.
06:50What is doubt?
06:51Is this kind of talk, my dear, that happens in the shanties?
06:52What important things happen in the tens of thousands around the world?
06:54The Great Depression?
06:55The Great Recession is bringing about the end of Edison.
06:58So Edison's dream is for people to innovate with cement?
07:00He steps aside
07:01My dear, you are a light in our memories, always.
07:03And his inventions that revolutionized the cement industry will never be forgotten.
07:06Live, my dear, before you get dragged behind the cement.
07:08And you will go after Edison
07:09Let's talk about an industry more important than cement.
07:12Cement is one of them.
07:12But they are different from them.
07:14Many people confuse the two.
07:16Let me explain the difference between
07:18Cement, concrete, and reinforced concrete
07:21Simplicity cement
07:22It is a dry chemical substance
07:24We mix the lamah with water and rang
07:26It remains a solid pigment.
07:28This, my dear, is in the language of the Benghazi
07:30We call it "mouneh"
07:31brick glue
07:31The adhesive material we use to lay bricks on top of each other
07:34Therefore, the bricks hold together in some
07:35He builds a wall, and the wall remains intact.
07:37That's it, my dear, it's a different mix.
07:40Between cement and water
07:41But then we add rubble to them
07:43The rubble usually consists of gravel or crushed stone.
07:45With any Ramadan
07:46This, my dear, is the brick, which is the layer.
07:48Right before the asphalt
07:49If you were walking on a road before it was paved
07:51This is the brick that includes tires for you
07:52Let me tell you that cement as a material was nothing new to people.
07:55And it didn't appear when they were in charge
07:56Cement is much older than we imagine.
07:59Archaeologists have found traces of cement in ancient buildings in Syria.
08:01Its age dates back to 6500 BC
08:04And in China, we find them in buildings that are very old
08:063000 BC
08:08Civilization like the Roman civilization
08:09If you saw its buildings, like the Pantheon or the Colosseum
08:11You will find very beautiful and very, very, very picturesque buildings.
08:17Because the Romans were able to develop a mixture of ingenious concrete
08:20This mixture is what revealed their entire civilization
08:22As you know, modern concrete structures these days have water, sand, a little bit of gravel, and a fortification.
08:26They will stay with me
08:26The Roman engineer Vitruvius in the first century BC
08:30And she put some Borkami rumat on this mixture
08:33The rumen was known at that time as pozzolana
08:35They based this mixture on Burgundy rocks.
08:37Make this the final mixture.
08:39A brilliant mix of ingredients that will keep these buildings standing to this day.
08:43So here they are telling me, and the source of this mixture is yours, O goose.
08:45What is this, you idiots?
08:46First, the Roman Empire fell
08:48Yalla Waya?
08:48The ball, my dear, almost fell and will be replayed.
08:50What's in it?
08:51It fell into history, just like that.
08:52The issue of Rome is complementary.
08:53With the fall of the Roman Empire in 476 AD
08:56The use of concrete and cement will begin to decline.
08:59I seek refuge only in God, Abu Hami.
09:01It means the polozant cement will
09:02And the mixture is comfortable
09:03There is no god but Allah
09:04Shall I tell you
09:05That cement from Zam'in that is treated with volcanic dust
09:07It is a special Roman recipe
09:09Current cement is made by treating it with calcium.
09:12We will learn about this calcium-based mixture.
09:14We'll find out in Qurna 19
09:16At the hands of a dockworker in Fleetz, northern England
09:18His name is Joseph Spedom
09:19He registered the patent for his invention in 1924.
09:22And between him and her, it will increase that it is cement
09:24Portland cement is one of the most famous examples.
09:26Who used it?
09:27Thomas Edison
09:27Cement is called by this name
09:29Because it resembles the rocks found in Portland
09:31Speed of the soul we left behind
09:32The basic components of this cement
09:34Limestone and clay
09:35That's how we treated you, Aziza.
09:36We know about cement and its history
09:37We know that it began a long time ago, thousands of years BC.
09:40And throughout history it has changed
09:42In the Roman Empire, he had a Burkanite mixture.
09:44And then in Europe and America it had a different mix
09:47Now, my dear, let's turn to one of the most important inventions of humankind.
09:51The one who opened the homes of all the state employees
09:53The one who secures a feeling and a need that is very important to humans
09:56It is the shelter
09:58Those four walls that strengthen you and strengthen me
10:00Reinforced concrete
10:01This, my dear, is one of humanity's greatest inventions.
10:04This is one of humanity's most important contributions to civilization.
10:06The reinforced concrete appeared because the truck needed a mission.
10:09We are on the side of the Prophet
10:10When we build any building, we have two types of stresses.
10:12My dear, a force is affecting the building.
10:14Pressure and tension
10:15Concrete can withstand pressure, but
10:17But the tensile force that acts horizontally with the building
10:20You need reinforcing steel
10:22Because iron has strength
10:23It can withstand tension but not pressure.
10:34For abbreviations, my dear
10:35The building is exposed to many types of pressures and forces that affect it.
10:39The two most important forces that the building is required to withstand
10:41It is pressure and tensile force
10:42The pressure that is like this
10:43Something that puts pressure on something
10:45And the tension that is like this
10:45The need comes out of each other
10:47Ordinary concrete has the ability to withstand pressure, but
10:49But it is difficult to withstand tension because it will unravel from each other.
10:52Here we reinforce it with reinforcing steel.
10:54Reinforcing steel, unlike concrete
10:56It can withstand tension but not pressure.
10:57Those who cooperate with each other will complete it later.
10:59With the appropriate quantity of concrete and the appropriate reinforcement
11:01It can withstand all loads on the building.
11:03The head of it is like the weight of the building in supporting the people in the building.
11:06Ded and Live Load
11:07It also resists adverse forces such as wind and earthquakes.
11:10While Edison failed to achieve his dream in the world of concrete
11:12But if only it would bring relief to our current situation
11:14I'm discovering that his vision was correct, and his dream has indeed come true.
11:17And at the time I finish this sentence now
11:19The global construction industry will be
11:21She poured the equivalent of 19,000 cubic meters of concrete.
11:25According to an article in the Guardian in 2019
11:27Concrete is the most widely used material after water.
11:31And the Ashtota, of course
11:33So what happened, Abu Hamil?
11:34How did the concrete shake our lives in some way?
11:36This is Edison, a worker who worships and promotes shows in the street.
11:38Let me tell you, the earthquake was enough to attract the attention of a brilliant scientist like Edison.
11:42He looks at the concrete and cement and realizes their value in a country like America.
11:45But the world remained as it was, needing a much bigger chair.
11:50The world is difficult to shake with an earthquake
11:51But if there's another war, and another world war
11:53A major disaster of human images will destroy the entire civilization of Europe
11:57And countries like Japan
11:59Here I tell you that in Britain alone, there was massive destruction and damage affecting more than 2 million homes.
12:04This is in addition to schools, hospitals, infrastructure, and transportation systems.
12:08And here, my dear, the country had to be rebuilt very quickly.
12:11And of course, there was a shortage of traditional exhibitions at that time.
12:13There was a shortage of wood and bricks, and also a labor shortage.
12:16This is where low-cost, fast-construction reinforced concrete will finally play the leading role.
12:21Initially, engineers will treat concrete as something ugly, even its name is concrete.
12:26Because of the issue of the shape of the concrete, engineers initially, when they come to build concrete buildings
12:31It will be covered with a layer of cement and its surface will be cleaned to make the concrete look fine. We don't want to see it because it's too dark.
12:36Until the famous engineer Le Corbusier came along
12:38This is my dear friend, a French-Swiss engineer, who was conducting studies on reinforced concrete and its uses.
12:42During the devastation of the First World War, but during his studies he fell in love with cement.
12:46Le Corbusier saw himself as living in a historical moment between two eras.
12:49Classical era, with its ancient architecture like European walls, and modern era, with its industrial image.
12:54Which are all middle-class workers, not aristocrats living in the highlands
12:58And cement here can be the link between these two eras.
13:01Classical architecture and industrial architecture
13:04Concrete was an easy material to work with, creating original shapes, and it was easy to make many things with it.
13:08So you could put people much poorer than the kings who were building Athura in this way
13:13At the same time, they have nice-looking houses.
13:15My dear friend, by using concrete, you can build affordable and middle-class housing for the largest possible number of people at a lower cost.
13:21Here, she saw that the concrete could combine the classical era with the demands of the present time.
13:26Le Corbusier would be required to design residential buildings to rebuild Marseille after the Second World War
13:31Remember what happened in the war and the destruction? He built United, he loved them.
13:34My dear son, the architects will destroy him at that time.
13:36My son is telling you, "Look, uncle!"
13:38I liked the concrete that wasn't plastered, so I wouldn't paint or varnish it.
13:42My building is like concrete cubes
13:44The concrete and cement in it did not cover or beautify it.
13:47People just appeared like this: sleeping with a filter, sleeping with makeup on.
13:50This, my dear, will begin with a well-known term in the world of architecture: Protealism.
13:54From the word "béton-brut," a French word meaning "rough concrete."
13:58Brutal, my dear, also means cruel and harsh in English.
14:01So you have very dry and hard buildings.
14:04Foul, my dear, people will criticize because the building looks ugly with the concrete.
14:08Where is the inspiration for the work now? Make me a Roman facade with Pharaonic designs, ironwork, and a balcony from the Mamluk era.
14:13What is this simplistic ugliness? If it's like this, what is it that doesn't sit still?
14:15He will have to show people his vision and the capabilities of the concrete he sees.
14:19And it has the ability to build fast, cubic buildings.
14:22It is capable of shaping and creating masterpieces like Renaissance palaces.
14:25We see this when he builds Notre Dame Cathedral with it.
14:28The church is supposed to be the place that is most often built with aesthetic appeal.
14:31It's hard to believe that the buildings of Marseille were built with concrete blocks.
14:34Able to use this concrete, he can construct exceptionally beautiful buildings.
14:37Curves and bends show that anything can be handled with concrete
14:42This concrete moment will transform from a necessity in its time into something aesthetically pleasing beyond mere engineering study.
14:47She says, "Instead of building and constructing cloud-like structures, we'll use glass pipes, and they called it Fish Bulls back then."
14:51Fish-shaped structures, let's show off the beauty of the concrete and the frame, we'll hide it.
14:55So that we can then see charming buildings made of concrete.
14:58Like the architectural style of Naimil
15:00The one who was once a disciple of the Karbouzis
15:02Mohammed, we notice you're interested in art and architecture.
15:05We were essentially solving a crisis during World War II.
15:07People wanted to live because the buildings were safe
15:09Where did you get this feeling that you put on your heart?
15:12Have some decency
15:12My dear friend, the concrete needed some legitimacy to make people like it.
15:17You need to follow their concept and convince them of it.
15:19This is what he will offer to Karbouzia and his school.
15:22He will change the culture of engineers worldwide.
15:23Because at the time when engineers before them were looking at something like reinforced concrete
15:27Because it is a cheap and rare material, no one would bother with it.
15:30They were focusing on more expensive materials like steel.
15:32They're making skylights with glass strips and they're working.
15:35Your uncle, Karbouzia, who will be called
15:39Abu al-Kharsana al-Musallaha
15:40This man, my dear, will turn the concrete into
15:44A symbol of modernity, and this contagion will spread.
15:47Rebuilding houses and buildings after the war
15:49Road and bridge construction
15:50After the war, countries will cling to concrete.
15:52The school of proletarianism unleashed all its potential
15:55You will benefit from it more
15:57We will build public housing and rebuild the war damage.
15:59In the seventies, concrete would be used to build more complex structures.
16:02Multi-control garages
16:04Wide roads, malls, and skyscrapers
16:06Also, infrastructure such as power generation plants
16:09The electricity pylons there are standing on the road.
16:11This is concrete
16:12Roads that vehicles sometimes drive on are made with concrete.
16:15But this is not in all cases.
16:16In case the music isn't suitable
16:17To work on it below
16:18Concrete provided the magic solution for building a new world.
16:21Inexpensive material that doesn't require regular maintenance
16:23Its estimated lifespan is long
16:24We built dams and reservoirs with special cement.
16:27Al-Tayeb 4
16:28And they drove us crazy with the heat and the earthquakes
16:30So that I don't have problems like what happened in San Francisco.
16:32Even salt water and capol
16:34We will overcome their threat with strong, durable cement.
16:36Zay El Tayeb 5
16:37Edison, if he looked at it now
16:38He won't just find concrete everywhere.
16:40But he will find a Chinese company like Alwinson
16:42I'm checking his tidings
16:43Ya Azizi Company
16:44It prints using 3D printing technology.
16:4710 houses a day
16:48Concrete will fulfill all the possibilities that Edison dreamed of
16:51And it will be material that the Guardian Bus will summarize.
16:53Concrete
16:54is how we try to tame nature
16:56Concrete is our attempt to tame nature.
16:58But as you know, my dear
16:59Humans are always trying to tame nature.
17:01He has to cause a disaster
17:02And the disaster here is the same disaster you know very well.
17:04And its rivers in every episode
17:05Because it's important and urgent, my dear.
17:06global warming
17:07And I asked you, my dear, about global warming
17:10She'll look me up and down and say to me
17:11So, Abu Hamad, exhaust fumes, cars, carbon, and ozone.
17:14If you're a vegetarian, you'll tell the bar what you're eating.
17:16It drowns in gases
17:17But what if the same thing is the primary source of pollution?
17:20residential and commercial buildings
17:22It consumes more than half of the electricity produced
17:24Electricity production is one reason for the decline
17:26For carbon removal
17:27Because up until now we produce it by cutting the throat of the beetle.
17:29Oil and gases
17:30If we leave them alone, we will find that they are the third source of global warming.
17:34It is cement
17:35If we consider, my dear, that the cement industry is an independent state in itself
17:37This country is number three after China and America.
17:41As the largest source of carbon dioxide emissions
17:43Maghari, my dear, also knows that concrete absorbs heat.
17:46So it creates heat inside the building
17:47Therefore, the people inside the building
17:49They need to operate air conditioners and fans.
17:51And they consume more electricity
17:53As we mentioned before, it's one of the biggest contributors to global warming.
17:56So you, my dear, are building heat houses, and you're adding to that.
17:59The air conditioning system generates more power, thus consuming more electricity.
18:01The heat will increase even more for you.
18:02Because of global warming
18:03Concrete
18:04Just as it was the reason for saving many countries after the war
18:06She also started writing a scary story about a country like Japan.
18:09Japan, if you don't know, my dear, is where the Arabs entered World War II.
18:12And the Nashmila from the war and from the atomic bomb
18:14Therefore, the books need a major reconstruction process.
18:17It is also one of the countries most prone to earthquakes and tsunamis.
18:21Salamat, this is my dear, you feel it's a hashtag
18:22Japan has begun to rely heavily on concrete.
18:25She began pouring its cement, concrete per square meter
18:28More than a country the size of America, thirty times
18:30According to the writer Alex Kerr
18:32The truth about modern Japan is that it is a frighteningly concrete state.
18:35State of the color gray
18:37According to the expression of a simple Japanese fisherman
18:39I feel like I'm in prison, and I haven't done anything wrong.
18:42Because of the abundance of gray in the buildings
18:43Abu Hamad, I feel your words are a little late.
18:45My decision is on the third floor
18:46My uncle became a partner with us, and God willing, we will overcome this.
18:48And next month's joy and determination, God willing.
18:50This is good news, Abu Hamad, meaning the world is on the path of peace.
18:52A lot during this period
18:53It's difficult for us to start criticizing and fixing things now.
18:55It's a little late, but don't worry, my dear Banana.
18:58Let me suggest some solutions to you
18:59In 2010, the new village of Qurna was incorporated in Luxor.
19:02Within the value of global family landmarks
19:06This, my dear, is a village built by the famous architect Hassan Fathy.
19:09The loyal friend of the architect Ahmed Ali
19:11He took him along on the whole journey, in every episode.
19:13Like the Al-Daheek program
19:14David Graber was with us everywhere
19:16Also, regarding any Simon Cooper victory
19:18He's everywhere with him
19:19And Muhammad Saadani in Civilization Barardi
19:22The best length too
19:23It's a total, my dear, that we are affected by.
19:25The architect Hassan Fathy built New Qurna from 1946 to 1952
19:29The purpose was to stop, so the corner
19:31The way it works is that it combines modern design principles.
19:34and old traditional principles
19:36But the old one offers very great solutions
19:39Hassan Fathy will incorporate classical elements
19:41For example, the idea of a building's courtyard
19:43The building retains its dome or lies in the air
19:45Lying in the air conditioner, natural
19:47This, my dear, is how a person can cope with heat.
19:49In pre-concrete eras
19:51Houses in hot regions like the Middle East
19:53It needs a courtyard because of the high temperature.
19:55It will be lower than the street outside the building.
19:58The patio can also retain cool air throughout the night.
20:00And peace be upon you if you pamper the trees or add a fountain in the middle
20:03As for Jojo, the house will be filled with windmills.
20:05The tower, as its name suggests, is an annex to the building.
20:08We orient the tower's structure towards the wind direction.
20:09They throw them into the air and bring them inside the house.
20:11This dome creates a higher elevation than the space.
20:14And you don't know, my dear, from your physics classes
20:16The hot air has a lower temperature than an hour.
20:19The hot air starts to rise and sends you the clock
20:22He'll come down and sit with you
20:23Hassan Fathi will bring back these old inventions amidst modern architecture
20:26"And Pioli, my dear," is a very eloquent phrase.
20:27As long as I, as an engineer, have the ability to make people comfortable
20:30God will not forgive me for raising the temperature.
20:32Inside the house, seventeen deliberate centigrade bicycles
20:35Oh, Hamid, by God, Professor Fatih Abdul-Yo Habda is a very cool guy.
20:37Fatih Abdalio, my son, my dear
20:39The clever worker, my dear, must always think
20:41In transient materials
20:42And the environment in which available materials are used
20:45Weather and temperature
20:46And many other elements related to place and time
20:50And it's not just an external appearance that's the solution.
20:51That's why when we look at concrete problems
20:53We can look for solutions
20:54Not just the building, but also the surrounding environment.
20:57Abu Hamid Abu Saydak, I'm not forgetful
20:58I want to get married and the link episode is over.
21:00Accomplish
21:00With time, my dear, this solution becomes easier.
21:02Industrial zakat programs not only made the drawing process easier for engineers
21:05What used to be a 12-meter canvas that an engineer could wander around aimlessly without ever reaching its end.
21:08But these programs also simulate the building.
21:11This means the engineer, instead of doing the exterior and interior design of the building
21:14It is possible to test the building's performance using these programs via energy models.
21:18He enters a building between the windows and the furthest and thickest walls
21:22Nice, we entered the building and he sat with us
21:23It also tells us where the building is located on the ground.
21:26Because simple things like the angle of the sun's fall differ from one place to another
21:29From chapter to chapter
21:30The program started taking all this data and all these elements
21:34The analysis process involves dissecting it.
21:36And give him an idea of how the building might be constructed?
21:39For example, we could reduce the size of the net before and increase it at sea.
21:41Or we can change the location of the windows so that they are in the form of chairs.
21:44When the air gets cold, it spins more in the void.
21:46Instead of going straight out the window
21:48Or for example, he might stay on the balcony for a while.
21:50It washes away the sun's rays and increases the shaded area.
21:52This is a simulation that answers all the questions.
21:55And, my dear, it's preferable to have a back-and-forth dialogue.
21:57I feel that the building is being designed appropriately using technology.
22:02And this, my dear, helped us to be able to do something like concrete.
22:05In environments completely different from those in which concrete used to solve problems
22:09As we said, the solutions don't just focus on buildings.
22:11But also the environment in which the buildings are built
22:20No, it pumps chilled water from a central station through an underground pipe network.
22:25An entire district is connected
22:27After that, the water that made the journey in the district returns to the station.
22:30It rotates and performs the process again from scratch.
22:33This is a smart system for cooling the heat in less time and with less energy than air conditioning.
22:37Something like LEED also emerged
22:39This is the most widely used system in the world for classifying green buildings.
22:43This, my dear, goes to the building and begins to assess it and tilt it.
22:46After the building is finished and he passes the test, he receives a certificate.
22:49The more a building's performance is in harmony with its environment, the higher its rating will be.
22:52So you haven't heard that this building, along with Alid, is environmentally friendly?
22:55Okay, that's good, Abu Hamid.
22:56So, thank God, we were able to cooperate with the environment to create a healthy and good system for us and the environment.
23:02Honestly, my dear, this is your news, and it's good news, but the solutions haven't helped up to this point.
23:05That's why concrete solutions themselves began to emerge, not the environment they were sewn with.
23:08Solutions rely on natural alternatives to cement.
23:11Like the Heydar Aliyev Center, whose famous architectural work is like iron.
23:15Which is located in the rest of the capital of Azerbaijan
23:17And it also includes, my dear, an invention like bio-concrete.
23:19In the concrete, we use chelation to love the other and increase carbon.
23:24There are also places that offer what are called Natural Building Blocks.
23:28We use biotechnology to completely transform cement with an organic alternative.
23:32Materials extracted from wood or plants, such as bamboo, are used for leaching.
23:36We mix these materials with polymers, and here we have an organic material suitable for construction.
23:40Bashania, my dear, just as it writes its history in every era through its achievements
23:43This history can be written through the buildings of the cities we lived in.
23:46We know that there was an ancient civilization through its features, the most important of which are the simplicity of its cities and buildings.
23:51We can learn a lot about any civilization from this: their beliefs, their way of life.
23:56Also, from the building materials, we can find out if they used materials from their own country.
23:59They didn't have to travel to get the materials they needed to build with.
24:02The building, in all its forms, defines the relationship between man and his environment, his civilization, and everything around him.
24:06That's why we need the ultimate story of the locusts.
24:08It is true that the Qur'an was saved after World War II, but in another way, it created a war with nature.
24:13We are slowly losing a silent war if we continue with the same strategy.
24:17My dear, we need to think a lot about concrete.
24:19So that, my dear, the building material doesn't become the yard material.
24:21That's all, my dear
24:22Good and good, better than what was said in the previous hadith in the next hadith
24:24Go down and check out the sources we have on YouTube. Subscribe to the channel.
24:27Mohammed, you went around a hundred times and didn't get anywhere in the end. How could you, my own son, get married?
24:29Look, my dear, the easy, simple way is rewarded
24:32What is the wage?
24:33Why the reward?
24:33In the case of Halali and Kharsan Armed Forces, you are not capable of handling this matter.
24:36Neither carrying a load nor giving birth
24:37Mohammed, are you being harsh, or is it a result of the world's harshness? Honestly, my dear, it's just a consequence of the world's harshness.
24:41It means, my dear, that you see me sitting in a cloak as long as you're doing that.
24:43Can't you see how my "huda" looks?
24:44This is my illness, and I'm exhausted and don't understand the easy way.