A
geodesic dome is a spherical or
partial-spherical
shell structure
or lattice shell based on a network of
great circles (
geodesics) lying on the surface of a
sphere. The geodesics intersect to form
triangular elements that have local triangular
rigidity and also distribute the
stress across the entire structure. When
completed to form a complete sphere, it is known as a
geodesic sphere.
Typically the design of a geodesic dome begins with an
icosahedron inscribed in a sphere, tiling each
triangular face with smaller triangles, then projecting the
vertices of each tile to the sphere.The endpoints of the links of
the completed sphere would then be the projected endpoints on the
sphere's surface. If this is done exactly, each of the edges of the
sub-triangles is slightly different lengths, so it would require a
very large number of links of different sizes.To minimize the
number of different sizes of links, various simplifications are
made. The result is a compromise consisting of a pattern of
triangles with their vertices lying approximately on the surface of
the sphere. The edges of the triangles form approximate geodesic
paths over the surface of the dome that distribute its
weight.
Geodesic designs can be used to form any curved, enclosed space.
Oddly-shaped designs would require calculating for and custom
building of each individual strut, vertex or panel—resulting in
potentially expensive construction. Because of the expense and
complexity of design and fabrication of any geodesic dome, builders
have tended to standardize using a few basic designs.
Related patterns
Similar non-geodesic structures may be based upon the pattern of
edges and vertices of certain
platonic
solids, or upon various expansions of these called
Johnson solids. Such structures may be
composed of struts of uniform length while having faces other than
triangles such as pentagons or squares, or these faces may be
subdivided by struts of other than the basic length. Plans and
licenses for such structures derived from licenses of the Fuller
patents were produced during the 1970s by
Zomeworks (now a manufacturer of
solar trackers). Both geodesic and
non-geodesic structures can be derived similarly from the
archimedean solids and
catalan solids.
The building of strong stable structures out of patterns of
reinforcing triangles is most commonly seen in
tent design. It has been applied in the abstract in
other
industrial design, but even
in
management science and
deliberative
structures as a
conceptual metaphor, especially in the
work of
Stafford Beer, whose
syntegration method is based so specifically on dome
design that only fixed numbers of people can take part in the
process at each
deliberation
stage.
History
The first dome that could be called "geodesic" in every respect was
designed just after
World War I by
Walther Bauersfeld, chief
engineer of the
Carl Zeiss optical
company, for a
planetarium to house his
new planetarium projector.
The dome was patented, constructed by the
firm of Dykerhoff and Wydmann on the roof of the Zeiss plant in
Jena
, Germany
, and opened
to the public in July 1926. Some 30 years later,
R. Buckminster Fuller named the dome
"geodesic" from field experiments with artist
Kenneth Snelson at
Black Mountain College in 1948-9.
Snelson and Fuller worked together in developing what they termed
"tensegrity," an engineering principle of continuous tension and
discontinuous compression that allowed domes to deploy a
lightweight lattice of interlocking icosahedrons that could be
skinned with a protective cover. Although Fuller was not the
original inventor, he developed the intrinsic mathematics of the
dome, thereby allowing popularization of the idea — for which he
received a U.S. patent in 1954.
The geodesic dome appealed to Fuller because it was extremely
strong for its weight, its "omnitriangulated" surface provided an
inherently stable structure, and because a sphere encloses the
greatest volume for the least surface area. Fuller hoped that the
geodesic dome would help address the postwar housing crisis. This
was consistent with his prior hopes for both versions of the
Dymaxion House.
However, from a practical perspective, geodesic constructions have
some disadvantages. They have a very large number of edges in
comparison with more conventional structures which have just a few
large flat surfaces. Each of the edges must be prevented from
leaking, which can be quite challenging for a geodesic structure.
Also, spaces enclosed within curved boundaries tend to be less
usable than spaces enclosed within flat boundaries. (Since it would
be impractical to produce sofas with every possible curved shape,
they are normally constructed along straight lines, and so leave
wasted space when placed in a curved space.)
The dome
was successfully adopted for specialized industrial use, such as
the 1958 Union Tank Car
Company dome near Baton Rouge, Louisiana
and specialty buildings like the Kaiser Aluminum domes (constructed in numerous
locations across the US, e.g., Virginia Beach, VA
), auditoriums, weather observatories, and storage
facilities. The dome was soon breaking records for covered
surface, enclosed volume, and construction speed.
According to a WAFB-TV
of Baton
Rouge
news report on November 27, 2007, the Union Tank
Car Company Dome has been demolished.
Leveraging the geodesic dome's stability, the US Air Force
experimented with
helicopter-deliverable
units.
The dome
was introduced to a wider audience as a pavilion for the 1964
World's Fair in New York City
. This dome is now used as an aviary by the Queens Zoo
in Flushing Meadows Corona Park.
Another
dome is from Expo 67 the Montreal,
Canada
World's Fair as part of
the American Pavilion. The structure's covering later burned, but
the structure itself still stands and, under the name Biosphère, currently houses an
interpretive museum about the Saint Lawrence
River
.
During the
1970s, the Cinesphere dome was built at
the Ontario
Place
amusement park in Toronto
, Canada
.
During
1975, a dome was constructed at the South
Pole
, where its resistance to snow and wind loads is
important.
Residential geodesic domes have been less successful than those
used for working and/or entertainment, largely because of their
complexity and consequent greater construction costs.
Fuller himself lived
in a geodesic dome in Carbondale, Illinois
, at the corner of Forest and Cherry [13597]. Residential domes have not
become as popular as Fuller hoped.He thought of residential domes
as air-deliverable products manufactured by an aerospace-like
industry. Fuller's dome home still exists, and a group called RBF
Dome NFP is attempting to restore the dome and have it registered
as a National Historic Landmark.
Chord factors

A geodesic sphere and its dual. |
The mathematical object "chord" of the "geodesic sphere"
corresponds to the structural "strut" of the physical "geodesic
dome". The general definition of a
chord is a (straight) line segment joining
two points on a curve. For simple geodesic domes we recognize the
associated curve to be the surface of a sphere. Here is how chords
of geodesic spheres are generated. We first choose an underlying
polyhedron with equal triangle faces. The
regular
icosahedron is most popular. The
sphere we use is specifically the "circumscribing sphere" that
contains the points (vertices) of the underlying polyhedron. The
desired
frequency of the subsequent geodesic
sphere or dome is the number of parts or segments into which a side
(edge) of the underlying polyhedral triangle is subdivided. The
frequency has historically been denoted by the Greek letter "ν"
(
nu). By connecting like points
along the subdivided sides we produce a natural triangular grid of
segments inside each underlying triangle face. Each segment of the
grid is then projected as a "chord" onto the surface of the
circumscribing sphere. The technical definition of a
chord
factor is the ratio of the chord length to the radius of
the circumscribing sphere. It is therefore convenient to think of
the circumscribing sphere as scaled to radius = 1 in which "chord
factors" are the same as "chord lengths" (decimal numbers less than
one).
For geodesic spheres a well-known formula for calculating any
"chord factor" is
chord factor = 2 Sin (θ / 2)where
θ is the corresponding angle of arc for the given
chord, that is, the "central angle" spanned by the chord with
respect to the center of the circumscribing sphere. Determining the
central angle usually requires some non-trivial
spherical geometry.
In
Geodesic Math and How to Use It Hugh Kenner writes, "Tables of chord factors,
containing as they do the essential design information for
spherical systems, were for many years guarded like military
secrets. As late as 1966, some 3
ν icosa figures from
Popular Science
Monthly were all anyone outside the circle of Fuller
licensees had to go on." (page 57, 1976 edition). Other tables
became available with publication of Lloyd Kahn's
Domebook
1 (1970) and
Domebook 2 (1971). With advent of
personal computers, the mathematics became more solvable. Rick
Bono's
Dome software outputs a script that can be
used with the
POV-ray raytrace to produce 3D pictures of
domes. Domes based on the frameworks of different underlying
polyhedra along with various methods for subdividing them will
produce quite different results. Mathematical formulas developed by
Peter W. Messer for calculating chord factors and
dihedral angles for the general geodesic
sphere appear in the Appendix of the 1999 Dover edition of
Spherical Models by
Magnus J. Wenninger.
Advantages of domes
Geodesic domes provide an enclosed space free of structural
supports.The basic structure can be erected quickly from
lightweight pieces by a small crew. Domes as large as 50 meters
have been constructed in the wilderness from rough materials
without a
crane.The dome is also
aerodynamic, so it withstands considerable wind loads, such as
those created by
hurricanes. Solar heating
is possible by placing an arc of windows across the dome: the more
heating needed, the wider the arc should be, to encompass more of
the year.
Nowadays, there are many companies that sell both dome plans and
frame material with instructions designed simply enough for owners
to build themselves, and many do to make the net cost lower than
standard construction homes. Construction techniques have improved
based on real-world experience during the past several decades, and
many newer dome homes can resolve some of the disadvantages that
were true of the early dome homes.
Disadvantages of dome homes
As a housing system, the dome can have numerous disadvantages and
problems.
The shape of a dome house makes it difficult to conform to code
requirements for placement of
sewer vents and
chimneys. Off-the-shelf building materials (e.g.,
plywood, strand board) normally come in rectangular shapes and so
much material may have to be scrapped after cutting rectangles down
to triangles, thus increasing the cost of construction. Fire
escapes are problematic; codes require them for larger structures,
and they are expensive. Windows conforming to code can cost
anywhere from 5 to 15 times as much as windows in conventional
houses. Professional electrical wiring costs more because of
increased labor time. Even owner-wired situations are costly,
because more of certain materials are required for dome
construction.
Air stratification and moisture distribution within a dome are
unusual, and these conditions tend to quickly degrade wooden
framing or interior paneling. Privacy is difficult to guarantee
because a dome is difficult to partition satisfactorily. Sounds,
smells, and even reflected light tend to be conveyed through the
entire structure.
As with any curved shape, the dome produces wall areas that can be
difficult to use and leaves some peripheral floor area with
restricted use due to lack of headroom. This can leave a volume
that may require heating – representing a cost in energy – but that
cannot be lived in. Circular plan shapes lack the simple modularity
provided by rectangles. Furnishers and fitters usually design with
flat surfaces in mind, and so placing a standard sofa (for example)
results in a crescent behind the sofa being wasted. This is best
overcome by purpose-built fittings, though it adds to cost.
Dome builders using cut-board sheathing materials find it hard to
seal domes against rain, because of their many seams. Also, these
seams may be stressed because ordinary solar heat flexes the entire
structure each day as the sun moves across the sky.
The most effective waterproofing method with a wooden dome is to
shingle the dome, but even this can be
a problem at the top of the dome where the slope is less than that
required by most roofing materials. (One solution is to add a
peaked cap to the top of the dome or to modify the dome shape.)
One-piece reinforced
concrete or
plastic domes are also in use, and some domes have
been constructed from plastic or waxed cardboard triangles that are
overlapped in such a way as to shed water. Buckminster Fuller's
former student
J. Baldwin insists that there is not any reason for
a properly designed, well-constructed dome to leak, and that some
designs
cannot leak
(Bucky Works: Buckminster Fuller's
Ideas for Today). However,
Lloyd
Kahn, after writing two books on the subject (
Domebook
1 and
Domebook 2), became disillusioned with domes.
He calls domes "smart but not wise", and has collected many of the
criticisms given above.
Methods of construction
Wooden domes have a hole drilled in the width of a strut. A
stainless steel band locks the strut's hole to a steel pipe. With
this method, the struts may be cut to the exact length needed.
Triangles of exterior plywood are then nailed to the struts. The
dome is wrapped from the bottom to the top with several stapled
layers of tar paper, in order to shed water, and finished with
shingles. This type of dome is often called a hub-and-strut dome
because of the use of steel hubs to tie the struts together.
Panelized domes are constructed of separately-framed timbers
covered in plywood. The three members comprising the triangular
frame are often cut at compound angles in order to provide for a
flat fitting of the various triangles. Holes are drilled through
the members at precise locations and steel bolts then connect the
triangles to form the dome. These members are often 2x4's or 2x6's,
which allow for more insulation to fit within the triangle. The
panelized technique allows the builder to attach the plywood skin
to the triangles while safely working on the ground or in a
comfortable shop out of the weather. This method does not require
expensive steel hubs.
Temporary greenhouse domes have been constructed by stapling
plastic sheeting onto a dome constructed from one-inch square
beams. The result is warm, movable by hand in sizes less than 20
feet, and cheap.It should be staked to the ground to prevent it
being moved by wind.
Steel-framework domes can be easily constructed of electrical
conduit. One flattens the end of a strut and drills bolt holes at
the needed length. A single bolt secures a vertex of struts. The
nuts are usually set with removable locking compound, or if the
dome is portable, have a castle nut with a cotter pin. This is the
standard way to construct domes for jungle-gyms.
Concrete and foam plastic domes generally start with a steel
framework dome, wrapped with chicken wire and wire screen for
reinforcement. The chicken wire and screen is tied to the framework
with wire ties. A coat of material is then sprayed or molded onto
the frame. Tests should be performed with small squares to achieve
the correct consistency of concrete or plastic. Generally, several
coats are necessary on the inside and outside. The last step is to
saturate concrete or polyester domes with a thin layer of epoxy
compound to shed water.
Some concrete domes have been constructed from prefabricated,
prestressed, steel-reinforced concrete panels that can be bolted
into place. The bolts are within raised receptacles covered with
little concrete caps to shed water. The triangles overlap to shed
water. The triangles in this method can be molded in forms
patterned in sand with wooden patterns, but the concrete triangles
are usually so heavy that they must be placed with a crane. This
construction is well-suited to domes because there is no place for
water to pool on the concrete and leak through. The metal
fasteners, joints and internal steel frames remain dry, preventing
frost and corrosion damage. The concrete resists sun and
weathering. Some form of internal flashing or caulking must be
placed over the joints to prevent drafts.
The 1963 Cinerama Dome
was built from precast
concrete hexagons and pentagons.
Largest geodesic dome structures
Many geodesic domes built are still in use. According to the
Buckminster Fuller Institute, the world's ten largest geodesic
domes are:
- Fantasy Entertainment Complex: Kyosho Isle, Japan, 710 ft (216 m)
[13598]
- Multi-Purpose Arena: Nagoya,
Japan, 614 ft (187 m) [13599]
- Tacoma Dome
: Tacoma, Washington
, USA, 530 ft (161.5 m)
- Superior Dome
: Northern Michigan University
. Marquette, Michigan
, USA, 525 ft (160 m)[13600]
- Walkup Skydome
: Northern Arizona University
. Flagstaff, Arizona
, USA, 502 ft (153 m) [13601]
- Round
Valley High School Stadium: Springerville
-Eagar,
AZ
, USA, 440 ft (134 m)
- Former Spruce Goose
Hangar: Long Beach, California
, USA, 415 ft (126 m)
- Formosa Plastics Storage Facility: Mai Liao, Taiwan, 402 ft (122 m)
- Union
Tank Car Maintenance Facility: Baton Rouge, Louisiana
, USA, 384 ft (117) m (Demolished in November 2007.)
[13602]
- Union Lehigh Portland Cement Storage Facility:
Union
Bridge, Maryland
, USA, 374 ft (114 m)
See also
References
- First Geodesic Dome: Planetarium in Jena 1922
incl. patent information
- according to
http://www.planetarium-jena.de/Geschichte.43.0.html
- For a more detailed historical account, see the chapter
"Geodesics, Domes, and Spacetime" in Tony Rothman's book "Science a
la Mode", Princeton University Press, 1989.
- "Refried Domes" by Lloyd Kahn
External links
- The R.
Buckminster and
Anne Hewlett Fuller Dome Home: the original R. Buckminster and
Anne Hewlett Fuller Dome Home located at 407 S. Forest Ave. in
Carbondale, Illinois, which was raised in just 7 hours on April 19,
1960.
- The R. Buckminster Fuller FAQ: Geodesic Domes
- Dome being constructed: 45x37 ft., on WV mountain,
detailed pictures, forums and external links to other Geodesic Dome
sites
- Emergency
Shelters International, LLC.
- Build Your Own Geodesic Dome
- different dome building techniques
- Geodesic Dome Notes: 57 dome variants featured
(1V to 10V) of various solids (icosa, cube, octa, etc)
- Article about the Eden Domes (PDF file 5.1
MB)
- Construction of the Eden Project Biomes
- Geodaetische Kuppeln (Geodesic Dome) by T.E. Dorozinski
- Geometry
Dome: geodesic dome design without corner connectors, featured
in the Guggenheim Museum and at BurningMan
- Shape optimization of Shell and Spatial structure
- Creating
Paper and Plastic Domes shows two original dome model
designs
- 3D Warehouse - Geodesic Collection Catalog(s)
of free 3D digital models for Google
SketchUp and Google Earth