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  2. Infrastructure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infrastructure

    Military infrastructure is the buildings and permanent installations necessary for the support of military forces, whether they are stationed in bases, being deployed or engaged in operations. Examples include barracks, headquarters, airfields, communications facilities, stores of military equipment, port installations, and maintenance stations.

  3. Green infrastructure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_infrastructure

    A good example of green infrastructure principles being applied at landscape scale is the Beijing Olympic site. First developed for the 2008 Summer Olympics but used also for the 2022 Winter Olympics, the Beijing Olympic site covers a large area of brownfield redevelopment in the northern sector of the city between the 4th and 5th ring roads.

  4. Hard infrastructure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_infrastructure

    Hard infrastructure. Hard infrastructure, also known as tangible or built infrastructure, is the physical infrastructure of roads, bridges, tunnels, railways, ports, and harbors, among others, as opposed to the soft infrastructure or "intangible infrastructure of human capital in the form of education, research, health and social services and ...

  5. Infrastructure and economics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infrastructure_and_economics

    Infrastructure and economics. Infrastructure (also known as "capital goods", or "fixed capital") is a platform for governance, commerce, and economic growth and is "a lifeline for modern societies". [1] It is the hallmark of economic development. [2]

  6. Critical infrastructure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Critical_infrastructure

    Infrastructure. Critical infrastructure, or critical national infrastructure ( CNI) in the UK, describes infrastructure considered essential by governments for the functioning of a society and economy and deserving of special protection for national security. [1]

  7. Information infrastructure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information_infrastructure

    An information infrastructure is defined by Ole Hanseth (2002) as "a shared, evolving, open, standardized, and heterogeneous installed base" [1] and by Pironti (2006) as all of the people, processes, procedures, tools, facilities, and technology which support the creation, use, transport, storage, and destruction of information. [2]

  8. History of infrastructure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_infrastructure

    History of infrastructure. Infrastructure before 1700 consisted mainly of roads and canals. Canals were used for transportation or for irrigation. Sea navigation was aided by ports and lighthouses. A few advanced cities had aqueducts that serviced public fountains and baths, while fewer had sewers . The earliest railways were used in mines or ...

  9. Infrastructure-based development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infrastructure-based...

    Infrastructure-based economic development, also called infrastructure-driven development, combines key policy characteristics inherited from the Rooseveltian progressive tradition and neo-Keynesian economics in the United States, France's Gaullist and neo-Colbertist centralized economic planning, Scandinavian social democracy as well as Singaporean and Chinese state capitalism: it holds that a ...