Content text 12 Girish Gondhali_DD Book.pdf
Pg no. 1 The Brain of Modern World: a Data centre complex By Girish Vaman Gondhali GUIDED BY Professor Sanjay Mehta A Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment Of the requirements for SEM-IX The Degree BACHELOR OF ARCHITECTURE MUMBAI UNIVERSITY MUMBAI, MAHARASHTRA. 5TH YEAR SEM-IX DEC’2020 Conducted at: RACHANA SANSAD’S ACADEMY OF ARCHITECTURE, AIDED COURSE RACHANA SANSAD, 278, SHANKAR GHANEKAR MARG, PRABHADEVI, MUMBAI 400025.
Pg no. 3 SECTION I : GENERAL 1. Approval Certificate 2. Declaration 3. Acknowledgement 4. Abstract 5. Table of Content 6. Key terms 7. List of Figures 8. List of Tables 9. List of Acronyms Figure 1. Procedural generated imagery
Pg no. 6 Pg no. 7 DECLARATION I hereby declare that this written submission entitled “The Brain of Modern World: a data centre complex” Represents my ideas in my own words and has not been taken from the work of oth- ers (as from books, articles, essays, dissertations, other media and online); and where others’ ideas or words have been included, I have adequately cited and referenced the original sources. Direct quotations from books, journal articles, internet sources, other texts, or any other source whatsoever are acknowledged and the source cited are iden- tified in the dissertation references No material other than that cited and listed has been used. I have read and know the meaning of plagiarism* and I understand that plagiarism, collusion, and copying are grave and serious offences in the university and accept the consequences should I engage in plagiarism, collusion or copying. I also declare that I have adhered to all principles of academic honesty and integrity and have not misrepresented or fabricated or falsified any idea/data/fact source in my submis- sion. This work, or any part of it, has not been previously submitted by me or any other person for assessment on this or any other course of study. Name: Girish Gondhali Place: Roll No: 12 Rachana Sansad’s Date: Academy of Architecture *The following defines plagiarism: “Plagiarism” occurs when a student misrepresents, as his/her own work, the work, written or otherwise, of any other person (including another student) or of any institution. Examples of forms of plagiarism include: ○ the verbatim (word for word) copying of another’s work without appropriate and correctly presented acknowledgement; ○ the close paraphrasing of another’s work by simply changing a few words or altering the order of presentation, without appropriate and correctly presented acknowledgement; ○ unacknowledged quotation of phrases from another’s work; ○ The deliberate and detailed presentation of another’s concept as one’s own. ○ “Another’s work” covers all material, including, for example, written work, diagrams, designs, charts, photographs, musical compositions and pictures, from all sources, including, for example, journals, books, dissertations and essays and online resources.