D. Wendland
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引用次数: 0

摘要

拱顶是用于屋顶和天花板的弯曲砖石表面,能够提供遮蔽和保护。在现代钢筋混凝土发明之前,它们是唯一可以用于这种目的的大型建筑,既防火又非常耐用。拱形天花板通常是建筑空间创造中的一个主要问题——作为具有雕塑品质的主导元素,作为迷人的建筑,通常是优雅的,有时是惊人的,甚至是大胆的,总是艺术的,在他们的设计和建造中需要并展示出巨大的专业知识和技能。在早期的石制建筑中,建有水平圆形通道的拱顶已经可以被视为空间结构。从早期的大文明开始,拱顶就由排列在放射状床节点上的石块建造而成——它们建造起来非常经济,形状复杂,可以适应不规则的平面,就像现代的地方建筑一样,比如在中亚或北非。在古代晚期,用石头制成的拱顶显示出几何设计的高超能力——这种艺术后来在中东和欧洲文艺复兴时期的建筑中得到了恢复。在罗马帝国,由混凝土制成的拱顶达到了巨大的跨度,足够坚固,可以持续几个世纪,几乎可以建造成任何形状。砖、石或石制的拱顶是建筑上最伟大的杰作之一,包括波斯建筑中奇妙的拱顶,哥特式教堂在细长柱子上完美平衡的高拱顶,巴洛克式拱顶的宏伟空间发明,巨大的圆顶,最后是现代壳结构的创造。原则上,拱顶是由形状决定的。它们的平衡需要曲率,这通常会产生复杂的几何形状。因此,他们在设计、规划和施工方面的要求非常高。必须设计锚固或桥台系统来控制侧向推力,并且必须创造一种形状,通过平衡拱顶内的重型部件来保持稳定性。此外,曲线形状的建筑需要在砌砖过程中进行形式控制,临时支撑结构的几何设计,如果是石头结构,则需要制定精确的规范来生产单个建筑元素。因此,除了象征价值、建筑空间理念、规划师和建筑商的专业知识和精湛技艺之外,拱形天花板还反映了应用几何和力学的历史发展。他们的研究让人们了解了创造这些建筑的知识社会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Vault
Vaults are curved masonry surfaces for roofs and ceilings, able to give shelter and protection. Fireproof and very durable, they were the only massive constructions available for such purposes before modern reinforced concrete was invented. Vaulted ceilings have often been a major issue in the creation of architectural space—as dominating elements with sculptural quality, and as fascinating constructions, often elegant, sometimes astonishing or even daring, always artful, and requiring and demonstrating great expertise and skill in their design and building. In early stone architecture, vaults built with horizontal circular courses can already be characterized as spatial structures. Since the early Great Civilizations, vaults were constructed with blocks arranged in radial bed joints—they could be built with great economy, with complex shape and adapting to irregular plans, as they are still in modern vernacular architecture, such as in Central Asia or in northern Africa. In Late Antiquity, vaults made with dressed stone show great ability in the geometric design—this art was later resumed both in the Middle East and in European Renaissance architecture. In Imperial Rome, vaults made of concrete reached enormous spans, were robust enough to last many centuries, and could be built virtually in any shape. Vaults of brick or stone masonry or of dressed stonework are among the greatest masterpieces of architecture, including the marvelous vaults in Persian architecture, the high vaults of Gothic cathedrals perfectly balanced upon slender pillars, the magnificent spatial inventions of Baroque vaulting, the great domes, and finally the creation of modern shell structures. By principle, vaults are stable by their shape. Their equilibrium demands curvature, regularly resulting in shapes with complex geometry. Therefore, they are very demanding in design, planning, and construction. Systems of anchoring or abutment have to be devised to contain the lateral thrust, and a shape must be created that enables the stability by counterbalancing the heavy components within the vault. Moreover, the building of the curved shape requires form control during bricklaying, geometric design of the temporary support structure, and, in case of stone structures, the formulation of precise specification for producing the single building elements. Therefore, beyond symbolic values, ideas of space in architecture, and the expertise and virtuosity of planners and builders, vaulted ceilings also reflect the historical development of applied geometry and mechanics. Their study gives an insight to the knowledge society that created the buildings.
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