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SPACE FRAMES AND GEODESIC DOMES

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SPACE FRAMES AND GEODESIC DOMES EVALUATION QUESTIONS FOR THE INDIVIDUAL GROUPS: How did you come up with the initial design for your space frame? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SPACE FRAMES AND GEODESIC DOMES


1
SPACE FRAMES AND GEODESIC DOMES
2
SPACE FRAMES AND GEODESIC DOMES
  • Objectives
  • Students will be exposed to the concepts of
    point, line, plane and dimensions in relationship
    to the triangle.
  • Understand the basic structural engineering
    concepts that underlie geodesic dome
    construction
  • Understand the advantages and disadvantages of
    modern building materials in dome construction
    and
  • Have an increased awareness of more in-depth
    concepts relating to the study of architecture,
    geometry, and structures.

3
WARM UP ACTIVITY
  • Select a team member that you will plan with to
    complete this project
  • Write a four to six sentence Design Statement
    about how your team think the roof of large
    structures (stadiums, gymnasiums, concert halls,
    etc.) are built without columns. Include your
    definitions of a geodesic dome and a space frame.

4
Vocabulary
  • A polyhedron (many surfaces) is a geometric solid
    in three dimensions with flat faces and straight
    edges.
  • A tetrahedron is a polyhedron with four sides,
    but is also called a pyramid.
  • A hexahedron is a polyhedron with six sides, but
    is also called a cube.
  • A polyhedron with six rectangles as sides also
    has many namesa rectangular parallelepided,
    rectangular prism, or box.
  • An octahedron is a polyhedron with eight faces.

5
Vocabulary
  • Tension is a force that acts to expand or
    lengthen the thing it is acting on.
  • Compression is a force that acts to compress or
    shorten the thing it is acting on.

6
  • SPACE FRAME STRUCTURE

7
SPACE FRAMES CAN SPAN LONG DISTANCES
8
SPACE FRAMES
  • A space frame is a truss-like, lightweight rigid
    structure constructed from interlocking struts in
    a geometric pattern.

9
SPACE FRAMES
  • Space frames usually utilize a multidirectional
    span, and are often used to accomplish long spans
    with few supports.

10
SPACE FRAMES
  • They derive their strength from the inherent
    rigidity of the triangular frame flexing loads
    (bending moments) are transmitted as tension and
    compression loads along the length of each strut.

11
Simplified space frame roof with the
half-octahedron highlighted in blue
12
  • Space frames are an increasingly common
    architectural technique especially for large roof
    spans in modernist commercial and industrial
    buildings

13
Some space frame applications include
  • Hotel/Hospital/commercial building entrances
  • Commercial building lobbies/atriums
  • Parking canopies

14
Advantages of space frame systems over
conventional systems
  • Random column placement
  • Column-free spaces
  • Minimal perimeter support
  • Controlled load distribution
  • Design freedom
  • Supports all types of roofing

15
GEODESIC DOMES
  • A geodesic dome is a sphere-like structure
    composed of a complex network of triangles.

16
GEODESIC DOMES
  • Geodesic domes are usually hemispheres (parts of
    spheres, like half a ball) made up of triangles.
    The triangles have 3 parts
  • the face - the part in the middle
  • the edge - the line between corners
  • the vertex - where the edges meet

17
The triangles create a self-bracing framework
that gives structural strength while using a
minimum of material.
18
DOMES
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A domes design is dependent upon many factors,
including
  • Needed area and span, or distance between
    supports
  • Budget and building schedule
  • Architects and /or clients aesthetic
    preferences
  • Forces, such as compression and tension, acting
    on the structure and
  • Building materials.

23
EXAMPLES OF GEODESIC DOMES
  • Spaceship Earth, the ATT Pavilion at Epcot in
    Disney World, Florida, is an adaptation of
    Buckminster Fuller's geodesic dome
  • Tacoma Dome in Washington State
  • Milwaukee's Mitchell Park Conservatory
  • Biosphere desert project in Arizona
  • Des Moines Arboretum, a self contained ecosphere

24
Engineering Disasters
  • Engineers must be concerned about safety at all
    times.  Lives are at stake when bridges,
    buildings, or structures collapse. Engineers
    must design structures to withstand all kinds of
    weather conditions and all types of loads.  While
    the goal is to have no design fail, engineers
    examine and learn from past mistakes to avoid
    such failures in the future.
  • Tacoma Narrows Bridge, Tacoma, Washington (failed
    in 1940)
  • 10 killed

25
Engineering Disasters
  • Falls View Bridge, Niagara Falls (failed 1938)
  • 18 killed
  • Tay Bridge, Scotland (failed in 1879)
  • 29 killed
  • Quebec Bridge, St. Lawrence River (failed
    1907,1916)
  • 45 killed

26
Engineering Disasters
  • Point Pleasant/Silver Bridge, Ohio River (failed
    1967)
  • 75 killed
  • Hyatt Regency Walkway Collapse, Kansas City,
    Missouri (failed in 1981)
  • 112 killed

27
TEAM CHALLENGE ASSIGNMENT
  • The team challenge is to build a 3-dimensional
    triangle
  • Team members must discuss the concept among
    themselves as they each attempt to build a model.
  • 15 minutes

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TEAM SYNTHESIS
  • Team members must attempt to join their
    3-dimensional triangles
  • Each link should be connected firmly and
    completely
  • Repeat the process until four triangles joined
    together in a square.
  • 20 minutes

30
Rubric For Space FrameProject
  • Layout/ Design
  • Information
  • Contributions
  • Quality Of Work
  • Following Classroom Guidelines

31
Brief Constructed Response
  • Student must complete a responding to one of the
    following topics
  • You are a hired Engineer designed to build a
    space frame for the new town. Your employers are
    not convinced that your space frame design would
    be successful. Create a BCR that explains how
    your space frame will withstand the forces placed
    on space frames Compression, Tension, Shear, and
    Torsion.

32
Brief Constructed Response
  • Student must complete a responding to one of the
    following topics
  • You are a space frame inspector that has been
    hired to inspect space frames. Create a BCR that
    explains how Live and Dead loads would be
    handled in your space frame design. Use examples
    to illustrate how these loads would be supported.

33
HOMEWORK
  • Research Buckminster Fuller
  • Write about the accomplishments and contributions
    achieved by Buckminster Fuller and explain how
    they relate to todays Architectural structures.
  • One to Two Pages

34
EVALUATION
  • QUESTIONS FOR THE INDIVIDUAL GROUPS
  • How did you come up with the initial design for
    your space frame?
  • Did your design change as you built your space
    frame?
  • Which geometric shapes did you use in your space
    frame? Why?
  • How does the strength of the space frame compare
    to the weight of the space frame?
  • Would you make any changes in the design of your
    space frame?

35
EVALUATION
  • QUESTIONS FOR THE WHOLE GROUP
  • Which space frame was the longest? Tallest?
    Strongest? Heaviest? Why?
  • What materials do you envision being used in
    future space frames?
  • How can computers help design space frames?

36
LETS START BUILDING!!!!!
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