Architecture
Architecture
A basic human impulse is to look for patterns in our surroundings. An example is the impulse to find patterns in time. People organize their daily activities around natural rhythms, such as the rising and setting of the Sun. Similarly, people are also driven to find patterns in space. One of the tools used to do this is mathematics. Mathematics attempts to describe relationships and patterns that emerge within ordered, logical structures. Whereas many patterns occur in the natural world, many occur in objects that humans fabricate, including homes, office buildings, concert halls, and places of worship. Behind these buildings are the architects who translate these mathematical concepts into concrete form. Today, humans continue to marvel at the mathematical constructions of ancient architects—the pyramids, ziggurats , temples, stadiums, and even such technological feats as ancient irrigation projects.
Historical Architects
Architecture and mathematics have historically been disciplines that were indistinguishable. Architects were mathematicians, and mathematicians were often architects. In the sixth century, Byzantine emperor Justinian wanted the Hagia Sophia to be unlike any other building built before, so he assigned the job to two professors of mathematics named Isidoros and Anthemios. In the Islamic world, architects created a wealth of complex patterns, particularly in their elaborate tiling patterns.
It has been said that people used little mathematics during the medieval period, but the magnificent cathedrals of the Middle Ages sharply contradict that belief. Medieval stonemasons had a firm command of geometry, and they constructed their monuments according to mathematical principles. They did not write their mathematics down in books; instead, they wrote it down in the structures and spaces they created. These and other traditional architects developed architecture into a discipline that is, at the core, mathematical.
Architecture and Mathematical Principles
What are some of the mathematical principles that architects use? One is the use of scale. In designing a building, an architect starts with a schematic that represents the building, much as a map represents geography. When making the drawing, the architect uses a tool called an "architect's scale" calibrated in multiples of and of an inch. Using a scale enables the
architect to draw a diagram of a room or building in a way that represents its actual proportions. For example, if the architect is trying to draw a section of wall that measures 4 feet 3 inches, the markings on an architect's scale enables them to draw a line that consistently represents that distance on a smaller scale. The scale also ensures that a line representing a section of wall that will measure, as an example, 8 feet 6 inches is exactly twice as long as the 4-foot 3-inch line. Being able to measure scale enables an architect to reproduce complementary proportions throughout a structure.
Closely related to scale is what architects and geometers refer to as the Golden Mean, or sometimes the Divine Proportion. The Golden Mean is expressed as the number 1.618 … and is arrived at by solving a quadratic equation . This equation defines in numbers the most aesthetically pleasing relationship of a rectangle. The use of the Golden Mean in designing buildings and rooms to maintain a pleasing sense of proportion—to avoid the appearance of "squatness," for example—has been a constant throughout the history of architecture.
Sometimes architects rely on mathematics for practical rather than aesthetic purposes. For example, in designing an overhang for a building, architects can calculate sun altitudes and azimuths . This enables them to determine the best angle and size of the overhang to provide maximum shade in the summer and solar heat in the winter. To provide adequate natural lighting in a room, they generally calculate the area of windows such that it is at least 8 percent of the room's floor area. Architects will use human dimensions to determine, for example, the best height for a counter or how much space is needed to walk and work between a kitchen counter and an island in the middle of the kitchen.
Architects also use geometry to determine the slope, or pitch, of a roof. This slope is usually expressed as a rise-over-run fraction; for example, a pitch means that for each horizontal foot, the roof line rises 6 inches; an roof would have a steeper pitch, a roof a gentler pitch. These measurements are critical if, for example, a dormer window is going to protrude from the roof. The architect has to ensure that the dormer is set back far enough from the front—but not too far—for the window and its surrounding structure to fit and be at the correct height. For architects, such precision is very important.
see also Architect; Golden Section; Scale Drawings and Models.
Michael J. O'Neal
Bibliography
Alexander, Christopher. The Timeless Way of Building. New York: Oxford University Press, 1979.
Bovill, Carl. Fractal Geometry in Architecture and Design. Boston: Birkhäuser, 1996.
Salingaros, Nikos A. "Architecture, Patterns, and Mathematics." Nexus Network Journal 1 (April 1999).
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Henry Earl Vaughan.(Local)
Newspaper article from: The Virginian Pilot; 1/15/2009; 543 words
; KELFORD - Henry Earl Vaughan, 73, a native of Halifax County...Chowan Hospital in Ahoskie. Mr. Vaughan served in the U.S. Marine Corps...and in ju jitsu. In addition, Mr. Vaughan received a diploma from Old Dominion...
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Arbitron.(People)(appoints Vaughan Scott Henry)
Magazine article from: Multichannel News; 2/7/2005; 563 words
; Arbitron Inc. has named VAUGHAN SCOTT HENRY executive vice president, chief information officer. He comes from E5 Systems, where he was regional VP.
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Arbitron Inc.(Allied Fields)(Vaughan Scott Henry)(Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Broadcasting & Cable; 2/7/2005; 557 words
; VAUGHAN SCOTT HENRY, regional VP, E5 Systems, Waltham, Mass., appointed executive VP/chief information officer, Arbitron Inc., Columbia, Md.
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[pound]5m Johnny Vaughan is dethroned by Henry VIII.
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 9/12/2001; ; 590 words
; ...Byline: TARA CONLAN JOHNNY Vaughan's eagerly awaited comedy...historical documentary. While Vaughan's sitcom 'Orrible was seen...viewers, The Six Wives of Henry VIII, historian Dr David Starkey...audience of 3.7million. Vaughan, who signed an exclusive deal...
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WILLIAM H. VAUGHAN.(LOCAL)
Newspaper article from: The Virginian Pilot; 4/5/1996; 399 words
; JACKSON -- Mr. William Henry ``Billy'' Vaughan, 50, of Route 1, died Wednesday night...Weeks Vaughan; three sons, Bryan Keith Vaughan of Anchorage, Alaska, William Henry Vaughan Jr. and Jason Ward Vaughan, both of...
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The sign of the rose: Vaughan, Rilke, Celan
Magazine article from: Comparative Literature; 7/1/1997; ; 700+ words
; ...did lie The fulness of the Deity. Henry Vaughan, "The Night" (522) Rose, oh...YEARS separate Rilke's rose from Vaughan's flower; less than 40, Celan...Why rose? And, if rose, why Vaughan? That the rose is ubiquitous in...
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Wordsworth's Ode: Intimations of Immortality, Shakespeare's The Tempest 5.1, and Vaughan's The Retreat.
Magazine article from: The Explicator; 3/22/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...of two seventeenth-century works: one, a poem by Henry Vaughan, and the other, a famous soliloquy from Shakespeare...the furthest thing from his mind. This brings us to Henry Vaughan. All through Wordsworth's "Ode," the language...
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ART: PRIVATE VIEW The Vaughan Bequest of Turner Watercolours to 31 Jan National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 1/26/2002; ; 367 words
; ...drawings, two of which now form part of the Vaughan Bequest. Each year, the 38 magnificent Turners bequeathed by the art collector Henry Vaughan go on display. Worried that they might fade, Vaughan stipulated that they should only be hung...
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Doctrine and Devotion in Seventeenth-Century Poetry: Studies in Donne, Herbert, Crashaw, and Vaughan.(Review)
Magazine article from: The Modern Language Review; 10/1/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...Donne, Herbert, Crashaw, and Vaughan. By R. V. YOUNG. (Studies in...Donne, Herbert, Crashaw, and Vaughan. Young finds it remarkable enough...passages in each part are those on Henry Vaughan, who does not readily lend himself...
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Now here's Vaughan at the Nursery End...(Column)
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 9/17/2005; 372 words
; ...birth to our first grandson. Equally, how's this for instant bipartisan co- operation? Immediately he was named Henry Vaughan Wooldridge. I do hope there will be an opportunity to introduce him to England's captain, who obviously inspired...
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Henry Vaughan
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Henry Vaughan The British poet Henry Vaughan (1621-1695), one of the finest poets of the metaphysical...sensitivity to nature, tranquility of tone, and power of wording. Henry Vaughan was born in Brecknockshire, Wales. He and his twin brother...
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Lanchester, Henry Vaughan
Book article from: A Dictionary of Architecture and Landscape Architecture
Lanchester, Henry Vaughan (1863–1953). English architect. He set up in practice in 1887, and in 1896 took James S. Stewart (1865–...
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Vaughan, Henry
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to English Literature
Vaughan, Henry (1621–95), twin brother of T. Vaughan , was born at Newton-upon...his debt to G. Herbert . Vaughan's first wife having died...1655. They had a son, Henry, and three daughters...
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Vaughan, Hannah, Henry, William
Book article from: The Concise Oxford Companion to the Theatre
Vaughan, Hannah, Henry, William, see PRITCHARD .
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Vaughan, Thomas (Eugenius Philalethes; 1622–1666)
Encyclopedia entry from: Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World
...1622 – 1666) VAUGHAN, THOMAS (Eugenius Philalethes...Twin brother of the poet Henry Vaughan, Thomas Vaughan was born...alchemical investigations. Vaughan is best remembered for his controversy with Henry More, who attacked him...
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