تقویم آموزشی آبان و آذر 1402 مرکز آموزشی شرکت مهندسی آرپان پژوهش آروین منتشر شد
access_time1402/08/18
perm_identity
ارسال شده توسط arpangroup
folder_open
اخبار
visibility
89.45k بازدید
تقویم آموزشی آبان و آذر 1402 بهمراه بیست درصد تخفیف جهت کارشناسان رسمی استاندارد منتشر شد
تمامی دوره های آموزشی با صدور گواهینامه تحت اعتبار سازمان ملی استاندارد می باشد
برگزاری دوره های تخصصی و عمومی بصورت کارگاهی و مجازی و هچنین آفلاین امکان پذیر می باشد
مرکز آموزش نمونه ملی سازمان استاندارد ایران در سال 1399
Instagram:arpanpajoohesharvin
WhatsApp:09056258395
Call on:02165548635-09056258395
مطالب زیر را حتما مطالعه کنید
انجام موفقیت آمیز ارزیابی همترازی مرکز ملی تایید صلاحیت ایران توسط اتحادیه تاییدصلاحیت آسیا-اقیانوسیه
این ارزیابی پس از گذشت چهار سال از ارزیابی اولیه،...
ادامه برخوردهای قانونی با فروشندگان مصنوعات طلای با عیار پایین
مدیرکل استاندارد استان تهران گفت: در پی گزارشات دریافتی مبنی...
هجدهم آبان روز ملی کیفیت گرامی باد
هجدهم آبان روز ملی کیفیت گرامی باشد شرکت مهندسی آرپان...
برترین آموزش ها را با ما کسب کنید:دوره آموزشی بازرسی و نظارت بر سیستم های برقی و الکترونیکی
دوره آموزشی بازرسی و نظارت بر سیستم های برقی و...
آزمایشگاه شرکت مهندسی آرپان پژوهش آروین به دستگاه تست دوام شیر اجاق گاز مجهز شد
با توجه به اجباری بودن استاندارد شیر اجاق گاز ،...
30143 دیدگاه
به گفتگوی ما بپیوندید و دیدگاه خود را با ما در میان بگذارید.
Омг – это not just сайт; это личное платформа для anonymous purchases. На этом сайте, вы надеяться на в confidentiality.
omg ссылка
элитный дом престарелых пансионаты для престарелых
End of an era: The big change coming to European travel in November
работа вебкам моделью
In travel news this week: an accidental megadeal on first-class tickets, the world’s best-connected airport and why now is a good time to plan a trip to Europe. Plus a bit of relief for those of you traveling this Labor Day weekend.
Goodbye to EU passport stamps
Paper mementoes of our travels, from boarding cards to even passports themselves, are fast moving into obsolescence.
The inky, smudgy joy of a fresh passport stamp will be a thing of the past for visitors to the 29 countries of the European Union Schengen Area starting November 10. That’s when the new automated Entry/Exit System (EES) comes into effect.
It’s separate from the delayed ETIAS visa waiver program, which is due to start in the first half of 2025 and will mean travelers from outside the EU will be charged a €7 entry fee that is valid for three years.
Destination inspiration
Get your stamps while you can with these European vacation picks.
Il dolce far niente – “the sweetness of doing nothing” – has been perfected by Italians on their vacations in southern sweet spots such as Naples, Ischia, Puglia, the Amalfi Coast and Capri. These remarkable photographs by UK photographer Lucy Laucht show how to relax the Italian way.
In Hungary, the Gresham Palace is the grandest Budapest hotel of them all, having sat in its prime position overlooking the River Danube for more than a century. Here’s how this architectural gem looks in its current incarnation.
Finally, if you’re considering a longer stay, an idyllic Swedish town is selling off land with prices so low you might think they’re mistakes. But Gotene, 320 kilometers (200 miles) southwest of Stockholm, is indeed selling plots with prices starting at just 1 krona, or 9 US cents, per square meter (11 square feet).
Aviation news
An airline accidentally offered a megadeal on first-class tickets, with 300 lucky customers getting savings of 85% off. Here’s what happened next.
The staff at Australian flag carrier Qantas must have been flat-out like a lizard drinking sorting that mess out. And if you don’t understand that lingo, it’s time to check out our guide to Aussie slang.
An airport on the edge of southeast Europe has been named the best connected in the world, with more than 300 direct flights to unique destinations. It’s been networking fast, too; it only opened in 2018.
Вы можете купить справку в медцентре https://mymednews.ru/ с доставкой по Москве.
This city is developing the world’s tallest timber tower, again
работа для девушек с проживанием
The US city of Milwaukee is already home to the world’s tallest timber tower. But another, even taller, wooden skyscraper could be added to its skyline, designed by Vancouver-based studio Michael Green Architects (MGA).
The firm recently released plans for the development, which includes a 55-story tower made principally from mass timber — thick, compressed, multilayered panels of solid wood. If built, it would usurp the current world title holder, the 25-story Ascent tower by Korb + Associates Architects, as well as becoming the tallest building in the state of Wisconsin.
MGA, which specializes in wooden architecture, hopes that the project will set a “new global benchmark for mass timber construction.”
The project is part of the redevelopment of the Marcus Performing Arts Center, which opened in 1969 and won the Honor Award for Excellence in Architectural Design from the American Institute of Architects in 1970. Led by Neutral, which bills itself as a “regenerative development company,” the redesign will transform what is currently the center’s concrete parking lot into a space with residential units, offices, restaurants, cafes, grocery stores and public plazas. According to MGA, construction will cost an estimated $700 million. The plan is currently going through the city’s approval process, during which it is expected to evolve.
Why timber?
While the use of mass timber is steadily increasing worldwide, thanks to changes in building regulations and shifting attitudes towards the material, it has yet to match the sheer height of buildings made of concrete and steel — although a slew of timber high-rises have been proposed in recent years. MGA says its tower design would be approximately 600 feet (182 meters) tall — more than double the 284 feet (87 meter) tall Ascent tower.
“The race for height is important,” said Michael Green, an architect and founder of MGA. “It’s not about showing off, it’s about showing what’s possible to the public.”
He argued that the reason timber skyscrapers haven’t yet become mainstream is because climate change hasn’t been at the center of the conversation. “We didn’t really need to challenge the status quo of steel and concrete,” he said. “But because those materials are so hard on the climate, we had to find a different way to build towers and big buildings in general.”