Перевод: с английского на все языки

со всех языков на английский

Calder

  • 1 Calder

    Calder

    Большой англо-русский и русско-английский словарь > Calder

  • 2 Calder

    • Calder

    English-Czech dictionary > Calder

  • 3 Calder

    (Surnames) Calder /ˈkɔ:ldə(r), ˈkɒ-/

    English-Italian dictionary > Calder

  • 4 Calder Hall

    Politics english-russian dictionary > Calder Hall

  • 5 Calder, Alexander

    [ˊkɔ:ldǝr] Колдер, Александр (18981976), скульптор, создатель подвижных конструкций — «мобилей» [mobiles]. Автор многих крупномасштабных скульптур, установленных в городах США

    США. Лингвострановедческий англо-русский словарь > Calder, Alexander

  • 6 Calder Hall

    ['kɔːldə,hɔːl]
    Ко́лдер-Холл (первая английская атомная электростанция; находится в графстве Камбрия. Введена в эксплуатацию в 1956)

    English-Russian Great Britain dictionary (Великобритания. Лингвострановедческий словарь) > Calder Hall

  • 7 Steers, Thomas

    [br]
    b. c. 1672 Kent, England
    d. buried November 1750 Liverpool, England
    [br]
    English dock and canal engineer.
    [br]
    An Army officer serving at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690 and later in the Low Countries, Steers thus gained experience in water control and development, canals and drainage. After his return to England he was associated with George Sorocold in the construction of Howland Great Dock, Rotherhithe, London, opened in 1699 and the first wet dock built in England. He was again associated with Sorocold in planning the first of Liverpool's wet docks and subsequently was responsible for its construction. On its completion, he became Dockmaster in 1717.
    In 1712 he surveyed the River Douglas for navigation, and received authorization to make it navigable from the Ribble estuary to Wigan in 1720. Although work was started by Steers, the undertaking was hit by the collapse of the South Sea Bubble and Steers was no longer associated with it when it was restarted in 1738. In 1721 he proposed making the Mersey and Irwell navigable.
    In 1736 he surveyed and engineered the first summit-level canal in the British Isles, between Portadown and Newry in Ulster, thus providing through-water communication between Lough Neagh and the Irish Sea. The canal was completed in 1741. He also carried out a survey of the river Boyne. Also in 1736, he surveyed the Worsley Brook in South Lancashire to provide navigation from Worsley to the Mersey. This was done on behalf of Scroop, 1st Duke of Bridgewater; an Act was obtained in 1737, but no work was started on the scheme at that time. It was left to Francis Egerton, the 3rd Duke, to initiate the Bridgewater Canal to provide water transport for coal from the Worsley pits direct to Manchester. In 1739 Steers was elected Mayor of Liverpool. The following year, jointly with John Eyes of Liverpool, he surveyed a possible navigation along the Calder from its junction with the Aire \& Calder at Wakefield to the Hebble and so through to Halifax, but, owing to opposition at the time, the construction of the Calder \& Hebble Navigation had to wait until after Steers's death. In the opinion of Professor A.W. Skempton, Steers was the most distinguished civil engineer before Smeaton's time.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    Henry Peet, 1932, Thomas Steers. The Engineer of Liverpool's First Dock; reprinted with App. from Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire 82:163– 242.
    JHB

    Biographical history of technology > Steers, Thomas

  • 8 cauldron

    s calder, calderó

    English-Catalan dictionary > cauldron

  • 9 Sears Tower

    Небоскреб [ skyscraper] в г. Чикаго, шт. Иллинойс, самое высокое здание в США (до 1998 - в мире). 110 этажей, высота 443 м. Высота двух установленных на крыше антенн 77 м. Построено в 1970-73 архитектурной фирмой "Скидмор, Оуингс и Меррилл" [Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill]. Состоит из девяти башен различной высоты, соединенных в единую структуру. Со смотровой площадки [Skydeck Observatory] на 103-м этаже открывается вид на весь город, окрестности и озеро Мичиган [ Michigan, Lake], а в ясный день также и на прилегающие территории четырех штатов. В музее небоскреба экспонируется точная копия здания в масштабе 1/190, а также оригинальная скульптурная композиция "Вселенная" ["Universe"] работы А. Колдера [Calder, Alexander], представляющая собой образец кинетического искусства ["moving mural"] (композиция из подвижных металлических листов и проволоки). Там же размещены правление компании "Сирс, Роубак энд Ко." [ Sears, Roebuck and Co.], магазины, рестораны. В здании работают около 12 тыс. человек, в том числе 6,5 тыс. служащих этой фирмы

    English-Russian dictionary of regional studies > Sears Tower

  • 10 Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology (M.I.T.) Массачусетский технологический институт (в Кеймбридже, пригороде Бостона, штат Массачусетс). Ведущий технический вуз США, открыт в 1861. Кроме всемирно известных лабораторий и различных отделений по подготовке специалистов высокой квалификации в области науки и техники, в Институтвходят Школа менеджмента Слоуна [Sloan School of Management], Центр по изучению городских проблем [Center for Urban Affairs] и Школа архитектуры ( одним из её выпускников был всемирно известный архитектор Пей [Pei, I. M.]. Рядом с Зелёным зданием находится собрание скульптур Кальдера [Calder] под назв. «Большой парус» [Great Sail]. Интересны тж. часовня, построенная по проекту выдающегося архитекто-ра Сааринена [*Saarinen, Eero] и аудитория Кресге [Kresge Auditorium]. В Галерее Комптона [Compton Gallery] демонстрируются технические экспонаты, а в Галерее Хэйдена [Hayden Gallery] современная живопись, фотографии, скульптуры и образцы дизайна)

    США. Лингвострановедческий англо-русский словарь > Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • 11 mobile

    мобиль, абстрактная декоративная подвесная конструкция с подвижными элементами. Идея мобилей принадлежит скульптору Александру Колдеру [Calder, Alexander]

    США. Лингвострановедческий англо-русский словарь > mobile

  • 12 Giles, Francis

    [br]
    b. 1787 England
    d. 4 March 1847 England
    [br]
    English civil engineer engaged in canal, harbour and railway construction.
    [br]
    Trained as a surveyor in John Rennie's organization, Giles carried out surveys on behalf of Rennie before setting up in practice on his own. His earliest survey seems to have been on the line of the proposed Weald of Kent Canal in 1809. Then in 1811 he surveyed the proposed London \& Cambridge Canal linking Bishops Stortford on the Stort with Cambridge and with a branch to Shefford on the Ivel. In the same year he surveyed the line of the Wey \& Arun Junction Canal, and in 1816, in the same area, the Portsmouth \& Arundel Canal. In 1819 he carried out what is regarded as his first independent commission—the extension of the River Ivel Navigation from Biggleswade to Shefford. At this time he was helping John Rennie on the Aire \& Calder Navigation and continued there after Rennie's death in 1821. In 1825 he was engaged on plans for a London to Portsmouth Ship Canal and also on a suggested link between the Basingstoke and Kennet \& Avon Canals. Later, on behalf of Sir George Duckett, he was Engineer to the Hertford Union Canal, which was completed in 1830, and linked the Regent's Canal to the Lee Navigation. In 1833 he completed the extension of the Sankey Brook Navigation from Fiddler's Ferry to the Mersey at Widnes. One of his last canal works was a survey of the River Lee in 1844. Apart from his canal work, he was appointed Engineer to the Newcastle \& Carlisle Railway in 1829 and designed, among other works, the fine viaducts at Wetheral and Cor by. He was also, for a very short time, Engineer to the London \& Southampton Railway. Among other commissions, he was involved in harbour surveys and works at Dover, Rye, Holyhead, Dundee, Bridport and Dun Laoghaire (Kingstown). He was elected a member of the Institution of Civil Engineers in 1842 and succeeded Telford on the Exchequer Bill Loans Board.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    1848, Memoir 17, London: Institution of Civil Engineers, 9.
    JHB

    Biographical history of technology > Giles, Francis

  • 13 Jessop, William

    [br]
    b. 23 January 1745 Plymouth, England
    d. 18 November 1814
    [br]
    English engineer engaged in river, canal and dock construction.
    [br]
    William Jessop inherited from his father a natural ability in engineering, and because of his father's association with John Smeaton in the construction of Eddystone Lighthouse he was accepted by Smeaton as a pupil in 1759 at the age of 14. Smeaton was so impressed with his ability that Jessop was retained as an assistant after completion of his pupilage in 1767. As such he carried out field-work, making surveys on his own, but in 1772 he was recommended to the Aire and Calder Committee as an independent engineer and his first personally prepared report was made on the Haddlesey Cut, Selby Canal. It was in this report that he gave his first evidence before a Parliamentary Committee. He later became Resident Engineer on the Selby Canal, and soon after he was elected to the Smeatonian Society of Engineers, of which he later became Secretary for twenty years. Meanwhile he accompanied Smeaton to Ireland to advise on the Grand Canal, ultimately becoming Consulting Engineer until 1802, and was responsible for Ringsend Docks, which connected the canal to the Liffey and were opened in 1796. From 1783 to 1787 he advised on improvements to the River Trent, and his ability was so recognized that it made his reputation. From then on he was consulted on the Cromford Canal (1789–93), the Leicester Navigation (1791–4) and the Grantham Canal (1793–7); at the same time he was Chief Engineer of the Grand Junction Canal from 1793 to 1797 and then Consulting Engineer until 1805. He also engineered the Barnsley and Rochdale Canals. In fact, there were few canals during this period on which he was not consulted. It has now been established that Jessop carried the responsibility for the Pont-Cysyllte Aqueduct in Wales and also prepared the estimates for the Caledonian Canal in 1804. In 1792 he became a partner in the Butterley ironworks and thus became interested in railways. He proposed the Surrey Iron Railway in 1799 and prepared for the estimates; the line was built and opened in 1805. He was also the Engineer for the 10 mile (16 km) long Kilmarnock \& Troon Railway, the Act for which was obtained in 1808 and was the first Act for a public railway in Scotland. Jessop's advice was sought on drainage works between 1785 and 1802 in the lowlands of the Isle of Axholme, Holderness, the Norfolk Marshlands, and the Axe and Brue area of the Somerset Levels. He was also consulted on harbour and dock improvements. These included Hull (1793), Portsmouth (1796), Folkestone (1806) and Sunderland (1807), but his greatest dock works were the West India Docks in London and the Floating Harbour at Bristol. He was Consulting Engineer to the City of London Corporation from 1796to 1799, drawing up plans for docks on the Isle of Dogs in 1796; in February 1800 he was appointed Engineer, and three years later, in September 1803, he was appointed Engineer to the Bristol Floating Harbour. Jessop was regarded as the leading civil engineer in the country from 1785 until 1806. He died following a stroke in 1814.
    [br]
    Further Reading
    C.Hadfield and A.W.Skempton, 1979, William Jessop. Engineer, Newton Abbot: David \& Charles.
    JHB

    Biographical history of technology > Jessop, William

  • 14 Kirk, Alexander Carnegie

    [br]
    b. c.1830 Barry, Angus, Scotland
    d. 5 October 1892 Glasgow, Scotland
    [br]
    Scottish marine engineer, advocate of multiple-expansion in steam reciprocating engines.
    [br]
    Kirk was a son of the manse, and after attending school at Arbroath he proceeded to Edinburgh University. Following graduation he served an apprenticeship at the Vulcan Foundry, Glasgow, before serving first as Chief Draughtsman with the Thames shipbuilders and engineers Maudslay Sons \& Field, and later as Engineer of Paraffin Young's Works at Bathgate and West Calder in Lothian. He was credited with the inventions of many ingenious appliances and techniques for improving production in these two establishments. About 1866 Kirk returned to Glasgow as Manager of the Cranstonhill Engine Works, then moved to Elder's Shipyard (later known as the Fairfield Company) as Engineering Manager. There he made history in producing the world's first triple-expansion engines for the single-screw steamship Propontis in 1874. That decade was to confirm the Clyde's leading role as shipbuilders to the world and to establish the iron ship with efficient reciprocating machinery as the workhorse of the British Merchant Marine. Upon the death of the great Clyde shipbuilder Robert Napier in 1876, Kirk and others took over as partners in the shipbuilding yard and engine shops of Robert Napier \& Sons. There in 1881 they built a ship that is acknowledged as one of the masterpieces of British shipbuilding: the SS Aberdeen for George Thompson's Aberdeen Line to the Far East. In this ship the fullest advantage was taken of high steam temperatures and pressures, which were expanded progressively in a three-cylinder configuration. The Aberdeen, in its many voyages from London to China and Japan, was to prove the efficiency of these engines that had been so carefully designed in Glasgow. In the following years Dr Kirk (he has always been known as Doctor, although his honorary LLD was only awarded by Glasgow University in 1888) persuaded the Admiralty and several shipping companies to accept not only triple-expansion machinery but also the use of mild steel in ship construction. The successful SS Parisian, built for the Allan Line of Glasgow, was one of these pioneer ships.
    [br]
    Principal Honours and Distinctions
    Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.
    FMW

    Biographical history of technology > Kirk, Alexander Carnegie

  • 15 Longbotham, John

    SUBJECT AREA: Canals
    [br]
    b. mid-seventeenth century Halifax (?), Yorkshire, England d. 1801
    [br]
    English canal engineer.
    [br]
    The nature of Longbotham's career before 1766 is unknown, although he was associated with Smeaton as a pupil and thus became acquainted with canal engineering. In 1766 he suggested a canal linking Leeds and Liverpool across the Pennines. The suggestion was accepted and in 1767–8 he surveyed the line of the Leeds \& Liverpool Canal. This was approved by the promoters and by Brindley, who had been called in as an assessor. The Act was obtained in 1770 and Longbotham was first appointed as Clerk of Works under Brindley as Chief Engineer. As the latter did not take up the appointment, Longbotham became Chief Engineer and from 1770 to 1775 was responsible for the design of locks and aqueducts. He also prepared contracts and supervised construction. Meanwhile, in 1768 he had proposed a canal from the Calder and Hebble to Halifax. In 1773 he was elected to the Smeatonian Society of Civil Engineers. As soon as a part of the Leeds and Liverpool Canal was opened he started a passenger packet service, but in 1775, after completing both 50 miles (80 km) of the canal and the Bradford Canal, he was dismissed from his post because of discrepancies in his accounts. However, in the early 1790s he again advised the Leeds and Liverpool proprietors, who were in difficulties on the summit level. Longbotham had colliery interests in the Uphol-land area of Wigan, and in 1787 he surveyed a proposed route for the Lancaster Canal. In 1792 he was also associated with the Grand Western Canal. Details of his later life are scarce, but it is known that he died in poverty in 1801 and that the Leeds \& Liverpool company paid his funeral expenses.
    JHB

    Biographical history of technology > Longbotham, John

См. также в других словарях:

  • Calder — is a Scottish name and can refer to:Places*Several rivers in Scotland and northern England *East Calder, Mid Calder and West Calder, three villages in West Lothian, Scotland *Calder, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, a town on the island of Saint …   Wikipedia

  • CALDER (A.) — Après avoir été l’animateur d’un cirque de figurines miniatures et le créateur de silhouettes caricaturales, dessinées dans l’espace avec du fil de fer, l’Américain Alexander Calder a inventé, au seuil des années 1930, l’une des formes les plus… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Calder — steht für: Calder Abbey, ehemaliges Zisterzienserkloster in England Calder ist der Name folgender Personen: Alexander Calder (1898–1976), amerikanischer Bildhauer Alexander Stirling Calder (1870–1945), US amerikanischer Bildhauer David Calder (*… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Calder — Calder, Orte in Schottland, s. Mid Calder und West Calder …   Meyers Großes Konversations-Lexikon

  • Calder — Calder, Alexander …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Calder — (Alexander) (1898 1976) sculpteur et peintre américain: mobiles, assemblages de formes légères …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Calder —   [ kɔːldə],    1) Alexander, amerikanischer Bildhauer und Grafiker, * Lawton (Pennsylvania) 22. 7. 1898, ✝ New York 11. 11. 1976; experimentierte in Paris (1926 34) mit mechanisch bewegten Drahtfiguren und motorgetriebenen Objekten. Zu Beginn… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Calder — (izg. kòlder), Alexander (1898 1976) DEFINICIJA američki kipar, osnivač mobila, tj. tipa skulpture čiji se pojedini dijelovi pokreću pod utjecajem zračne struje, motora i sl., autor mnogobrojnih prostornih konstrukcija izrađenih iz drva i žice …   Hrvatski jezični portal

  • Calder — [kôl′dər] 1. Alexander 1898 1976; U.S. abstract sculptor, esp. of mobiles and stabiles 2. Alexander Stirling [stʉr′liŋ] 1870 1945; U.S. sculptor: father of Alexander …   English World dictionary

  • Calder — Cette page d’homonymie répertorie les différents sujets et articles partageant un même nom. Sommaire 1 Patronymes 2 Prénoms 3 Top …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Calder — This interesting surname may be of either early medieval English or Scottish origin, and is a locational name from Calder in Cumberland, or from any of the various places in Scotland called Calder or Cawdor. The Cumbrian place, recorded as Calder …   Surnames reference

Поделиться ссылкой на выделенное

Прямая ссылка:
Нажмите правой клавишей мыши и выберите «Копировать ссылку»