| 
        Abstracts of Research Articles Available Online
        and in Print |  
       
     
     A
    Tale of Bridges: Topology and Architecture Jean-Michel
    Kantor
  (English
    version) (Autumn 2005) In
    modern times geometry has had a new development : topology, a
    field with more freedom and new dreams for the mathematician
    and the architect.We describe some of its successes and problems,
    from Euler to Poincaré, from Riemann to strings. 
     Une
    histoire de ponts topologies et architecture Jean-Michel
    Kantor
  (French
    version) (Autumn 2005) Récemment,
    une nouvelle branche de la géométrie s'est développée
    : la topologie, un domaine qui offre plus de libertés,
    et permet des rêves nouveaux, aussi bien au mathématicien
    qu'à l'architecte. Nous décrivons ici quelques
    uns de ses succès et de ses problématiques, de
    Euler à Poincaré, de Riemann aux ficelles. 
     Mathematics,
    Astronomy and Sacred Landscape in the Inka Heartland
    Giulio Magli (Autumn 2005) It
    is very well known that the "Inca space" was a sacred
    space in which directions, places, monuments, springs and so
    on all had a sacred content. In recent years, new insights into
    this complex cosmographic view have been obtained with the study
    of the so-called Cusco ceque system. Further, new insights
    have been obtained in the field of Incan astronomical lore, with
    the identification of Incan dark cloud constellations of the
    Milky Way. Giulio Magli proposes possible new connections between
    the Inka view of the sky, the Inka system of notation of numbers
    and dates called Khipus, and the sacred landscape of the
    capital of the empire. 
    
      
        | 
         Editor's Note: Vol 7 No 1 (Spring 2005) was
        dedicated to "Mathematics in the Architecture Curriculum".
        For abstracts of the papers in that issue, see Didactics
        Abstracts | 
       
     
    How Should We Study Architecture
    and Mathematics? Sandro Caparrini and David
    Speiser (Autumn 2004) The
    1996 paper by John Clagett on "Transformational Geometry
    and the Central European Baroque Church," presented at the
    first Nexus conference on architecture and mathematics is taken
    as a starting point in a discussion that intends to shed light
    on how to study the Nexus of Architecture and Mathematics. 
    Andrea Palladio's Villa Cornaro
    in Piombino Dese Branko Mitrovic (Autumn 2004) Villa Cornaro in Piombino
    Dese is one of Andrea Palladio's most influential works. As for
    many of Palladio's buildings, modern surveys do not exist, are
    incomplete, omit information about important aspects such as
    the use of the classical orders, or have been published without
    dimensions indicated in the plans. The analysis presented here
    is based on a June 2003 survey of the villa made by Steve Wassell,
    Tim Ross, Melanie Burke and author Branko Mitrovic. In his treatise,
    Palladio listed his preferred room types: circular, square or
    rectangular with length-to-width ratios 2/1, 3/2, 4/3, 5/3 or
    Ö2/1. Half a century ago, this
    kind of speculative search for the comprehensive interpretation
    of Palladio's proportional system received great impetus from
    Rudolf Wittkower's Architectural Principles in the Age of
    Humanism. It is, however, important to differentiate between
    the derivation of certain proportional rules and their explanation.Wittkower
    asserted thatthe use of ornamentation -- and especially the orders
    -- did not matter in Palladio's design process. Refuting this
    theory, Mitrovic argues that Palladio, in the early 1550, formulated
    a very different approach to the use of the orders, combining
    the principle of preferred room proportions and the use of a
    columnar system to determine the placement of walls. The proportions
    of the main sala and porticos are derived on the basis of the
    proportional rules for the order used; the proportions of the
    side rooms on the basis of preferred ratios. Ultimately, the
    result is that the mathematics of the orders became decisive
    for Palladio's design principles and the use of proportions from
    the early 1550s. 
    Geometric Methods of the 1500s for
    Laying Out the Ionic Volute Denise Andrey and Mirko
    Galli
  (English
    version) (Autumn 2004) Volutes,
    a distinguishing feature of the Ionic order, are the double curls
    in the form of spirals on either side of the Ionic capital. In
    the Renaissance, the Ionic volute was the object of study for
    architects who were concerned with the development of the new
    theories of architectural forms. In addition to studies of its
    proportions, research focused on the search for a sure and elegant
    method for laying out the volute. The point of departure for
    the elaborate theories were the ruins of buildings from the classical
    era and the treatise by Vitruvius. Authors Denise Andrey and
    Mirko Galli compare and contrast three methods by Sebastiano
    Serlio, Giuseppe Salviati and by Philandrier for laying out the
    Ionic volute. 
    Metodi geometrici del '500 per
    tracciare la voluta ionica Denise Andrey e
    Mirko Galli
  
    (versione italiana) (Autumn 2004) Le volute sono i doppi arricciamenti in
    forma di spirale ai lati del capitello dell'ordine ionico, e
    ne costituiscono la sua componente caratterizzante. Nel periodo
    rinascimentale la voluta ionica è stata al centro di molte
    ricerche da parte degli architetti occupati a sviluppare il nuovo
    apparato teorico delle forme architettoniche. Oltre allo studio
    delle sue proporzioni si era alla ricerca di un metodo per tracciarla
    in modo sicuro ed elegante. Punto di partenza per le proposte
    elaborate erano i resti di edifici di epoca classica e il trattato
    di Vitruvio. Il contributo di Denise Andrey e Mirko Galli presenta
    tre metodi di disegno della voluta sviluppati nel Cinquecento,
    analizzandone le caratteristiche geometriche e matematiche. 
    Musical Symbolism in the Works of
    Leon Battista Alberti: From De re aedificatoria to the
    Rucellai Sepulchre  Angela Pintore (English version) (Autumn
    2004) On the basis
    of a new survey, Angela Pintore analyzes the micro-architecture
    of the Rucellai Sepulchre in Florence, because the sepulchre
    is the only object designed ex novo by Leon Battista Alberti.
    Attention is also given to the relationship established between
    the sepulchre and the chapel that houses it, and to the modifications
    made to the chapel by Alberti himself. Alberti studied carefully
    the combinations between the number of the elements of the front
    elevation and that of lateral elevation and of the apse so that
    the relationship between them would recall the harmonic musical
    ratios that he set forth in De re aedificatoria, in which
    he outlines the correspondence between architectural proportions
    and harmonic musical ratios that will become the element that
    characterizes Renaissance architectural theory, inaugurating
    a tradition that will begin to see a decline only in the eighteenth
    century. In spite of the myriad difficulties of establishing
    if these speculations had indeed any concrete effect on architecture,
    it is clear that Alberti's theory is not the result of individual
    reflection, based solely on the classical sources that Alberti
    himself explicitly cites in his treatise, but rather is the summit
    of an age-old tradition of thought that, during the whole arc
    of the Middle Ages, had deepened the study of the symbolic and
    expressive value of harmonic ratios. 
    Il simbolismo musicale nell'opera
    di Leon Battista Alberti:dal De re aedificatoria al Sepolcro
    Rucellai  Angela Pintore  (versione italiana)
    (Autumn 2004) Angela
    Pintore ha intrapreso un nuovo rilievo e l'analisi della micro-architettura
    del Sepolcro Rucellai a Firenze, essendo il sepolcro l'unico
    manufatto ad essere stato realizzato ex novo da Leon Battista
    Aberti, e analizza anche i rapporti che esso instaura con la
    cappella che lo ospita e, soprattutto, le modificazioni apportate
    a quest'ultima dallo stesso Alberti. Alberti studia con attenzione
    l'accostamento tra il numero degli elementi del prospetto frontale
    e quelli del prospetto laterale e dell'abside del sepolcro in
    modo che il rapporto tra essi riproponga i rapporti armonici
    musicali esposti nel De re aedificatoria, nel quale delinea
    la corrispondenza tra proporzioni architettoniche e rapporti
    armonici musicali che diverrà elemento caratterizzante
    della teoria architettonica rinascimentale, inaugurando una tradizione
    la cui fortuna conoscerà il declino sono nel XVIII secolo.
    Nonostante le indubbie difficoltà a stabilire se queste
    speculazioni avessero un riscontro nella pratica architettonica
    è chiaro che la teoria Albertiana non costituisce il risultato
    di una riflessione autonoma, basata unicamente su quelle fonti
    classiche a cui lo stesso Alberti fa esplicito riferimento nel
    suo trattato, ma si situa a coronamento di una secolare tradizione
    di pensiero che, durante tutto il medioevo, aveva approfondito
    lo studio del valore simbolico ed espressivo dei rapporti armonici. 
    Guarino Guarini, Mathematics and
    Architecture: The Restoration of the Chapel of the Shroud in
    Turin  Mirella Macera, Paolo
    Napoli, Fernando Delmastro. Interview by Kim Williams, edited
    by Sandro Caparrini
  (English
    version) (Autumn 2004) Guarini'sChapel
    of the Shroud in Turin, a major monument of the Italian Baroque,
    was davastated by fire in 1997. Plans are now underway for its
    restoration. An important intial phase of the restoration project
    is to understand Guarini's original design process and the construction
    techniques used. In this interview with Mirella Macera, Paolo
    Napoli and Fernando Delmastro, coordinators of the restoration
    project, the nature of the damage caused by the fire, the steps
    taken thus far to stabilize the structure, and new discoveries
    about the Chapel as a result of the fire are examined. The interview
    is by Kim Williams, edited by Sandro Caparrini. 
    Guarino Guarini, matematica e architettura:
    Il restauro della Cappella della SS. Sindone a Torino
     Mirella Macera, Paolo Napoli, Fernando
    Delmastro. Intervista di Kim Williams, curato da Sandro Caparrini
   (versione
    italiana) (Autumn 2004) I
    problemi del restauro della Cappella della SS. Sindone di Guarino
    Guarini a Torino, destrutto dall'incendio nel 1997, sono stati
    esaminati in un intervista con i responsabile per il restauro
    arch. Mirella Macera, ing. Paolo Napoli e arch. Fernando Delmastro
    in un intervista di Kim Williams curato da Sandro Caparrini. 
    The Use of the Golden Section in
    the Great Mosque of Kairouan Kenza Boussora and Said
    Mazouz (Spring 2004) The
    geometrical analysis conducted reveals very clearly a consistent
    application of the golden section. The geometric technique of
    construction of the golden section seems to have determined the
    major decisions of the spatial organisation. The golden section
    appears repeatedly in some part of the building measurements.
    It is found in the overall proportion of the plan and in the
    dimensioning of the prayer space, the court and the minaret.
    The existence of the golden section in some part of Kairouan
    mosque indicates that the elements designed and generated with
    this principle may have been realised at the same period. This
    suggests and opens the possibility for further inquiry into the
    dating of the transformations that took place in this mosque.
    Authors Kenza Boussora and Said Mazouz examine earlier archaeological
    theories about the mosque, demonstrate the geometric constructions
    for the golden section, and apply these constructions to the
    plan of the mosque to test their hypothesis. 
    Philosophy and Science of Music
    in Ancient Greece: Predecessors of Pythagoras and their Contribution
    Graham Pont (Spring 2004) Although
    the writings of the classical Greeks and their Roman and Arabic
    successors remain the foundation of western philosophy and science
    of music, as well as their sometimes problematic applications
    to architecture and other constructive arts, there has been a
    steady renewal of interest in the old science of harmonics, and
    it is recognized that much of the Greek theory and practice of
    harmonics was unquestionably derived from earlier cultures, the
    still shadowy predecessors of Pythagoras. Though hardly any modern
    writers would describe themselves as Pythagoreans, some of their
    ideas have important connections with the old tradition and all
    are symptomatic of a new era in the history of thought when mechanistic
    and reductionist paradigms are giving way to a holistic and organic
    world-view. Modern scholarship has established that most of the
    doctrines traditionally ascribed to Pythagoras were really the
    contributions of the older high civilisations, particularly of
    Mespotamia and Egypt. The rise and dissemination of these perennially
    influential doctrines remains one of the most formidable problems
    for the historian of ideas. Graham Pont. 
    The Fractal Nature of the Architectural
    Orders Daniele Capo  (English
    version) (Spring 2004) Daniele
    Capo tests with regards to architectural elements certain concepts
    that are proper to fractal geometry. The purpose is not to show
    that the architectural orders are true fractal objects, but rather
    that how fractal "instruments" can be used to approach
    certain objects and what kinds of information can be gleaned
    by such an approach. Understanding the orders, which for centuries
    have provided the basis for Western architecture, in light of
    the analysis presented above, allows us to observe, through the
    analysis of numerical data, how small elements are inserted in
    a continuous and coherent whole. If we interpret this structure
    fractally we do not distinguish between the essential and the
    inessential; everything is essential and so creates in this way
    a greater (fractal) coherence. It could be said, in this light,
    that the general form is not what counts the most, but rather,
    what is really important is the way in which parts hold together. 
    La natura frattale dei ordini architettonici
    Daniele Capo  
    (versione italiana) (Spring 2004)  Lo scopo di questo articolo di Daniele
    Capo è quello di mettere alla prova determinati concetti
    propri della geometria frattale su degli oggetti architettonici.
    In questo modo non si dimostrerà che gli ordini architettonici
    sono dei veri e propri oggetti frattali ma, piuttosto, si vedrà
    come l'approccio con degli "strumenti" frattali possa
    essere effettuato, e quali informazioni possiamo ricavare da
    un simile procedimento. 
    An American Vision of Harmony:
    Geometric Proportions in Thomas Jefferson's Rotunda at the University
    of Virginia Rachel Fletcher (Autumn 2003) Thomas Jefferson dedicated
    his later years to establishing the University of Virginia, believing
    that the availability of a public liberal education was essential
    to national prosperity and individual happiness. His design for
    the University stands as one of his greatest accomplishments
    and has been called "the proudest achievement of American
    architecture." Taking Jefferson's design drawings as a basis
    for study, this paper explores the possibility that he incorporated
    incommensurable geometric proportions in his designs for the
    Rotunda. Without actual drawings to illustrate specific geometric
    constructions, it cannot be said definitively that Jefferson
    utilized such proportions. But a comparative analysis between
    Jefferson's plans and Palladio's renderings of the Pantheon (Jefferson's
    primary design source) suggests that both designs developed from
    similar geometric techniques. 
    Rudolph M. Schinder: Space Reference
    Frame, Modular Coordination and the "Row"
    Lionel March (Autumn 2003) While Rudolph Schindler's "space reference
    frame" is becoming better known, its relationship to the
    "row" has only been recently investigated. The theory
    of the "row" counters traditional proportional notions,
    many of which are derived from the principle of geometric similitude:
    a principle which is mostly represented in architectural drawings
    by regulating lines and triangulation. Here, Lionel March presents
    the simple mathematics of row theory. A short background note
    concludes the paper. 
    Rudolph M. Schindler: Proportion,
    Scale and the "Row" Jin-Ho Park
    (Autumn 2003) Jin-Ho
    Park interprets Rudolph M. Schindler's 'reference frames in space'
    as set forth in his 1916 lecture note on mathematics, proportion
    and architecture, in the context of John Beverley Robinson's1898-99
    articles in the Architectural Reconrd. Schindler's unpublished,
    handwritten notes provide a source for his concern for "rhythmic"
    dimensioning in architecture. He uses a system in which rectangular
    dimensions are arranged in "rows". Architectural examples
    of Schindler's Shampay, Braxton-Shore and How Houses illustrate
    the principles. 
    The Cinema as Secular Temple: Ethos,
    Form and Symbolism of the Capitol Theatre Graham
    Pont ( Autumn 2003) Since
    the Tetraktys is the most important symbol of the Pythagorean
    school and system, its prominence in the form and decoration
    of the Capitol Theatre, Melbourne (Australia), suggests that
    this building was designed in the Pythagorean spirit. The Tetraktys
    encodes the fundamental proportions or harmonies of the musical
    scale (1:2, 2:3, 3:4) and so one would expect to find these same
    proportions used in the form and decoration of the Capitol as
    well as evidence of relevant musical thought and inspiration
    in the writings of its designers, Walter Burley and Marion Mahony
    Griffin. Graham Pont explains the significance of the Tetraktys
    in the Pythagorean tradition, identifies the Capitol as a "secular
    temple" in form and ethos, and indicates possible contemporary
    influences on the theatre's remarkable motif of the "Crystal
    Tetraktys" and other symbolism. 
    Perspective as a Symmetry Transformation György Darvas (Spring 2003)  From the quattrocento
    to the end of the nineteenth century, perspective has been the
    main tool of artists aiming to paint a naturalistic representation
    of our environment. In painters' perspective we find a combination
    of affine projection and similitude. We recognise the original
    object in the painting because perspective is a symmetry transformation
    preserving certain features. The subject of the transformation,
    in the case of perspectival representation, is visible reality,
    and the transformed object is the artwork. The application of
    symmetry transformations developed from the origin of perspective
    through the centuries to the present day. The single vanishing
    point could be moved (translated), and even doubled, developments
    that made it possible to represent an object from different points
    of view. In the twentieth cenutyr, the application of topological
    symmetry combined with similitude resulted in new ways of seeing,
    new tools for artists such as cubists and futurists. 
    Distance to the Perspective Plane
    Tomás García-Salgado (Spring 2003)  Distance is an integral
    concept in perspective, both ancient and modern. Tomás
    García-Salgado provides a historical survey of the concept
    of distance, then goes on to draw some geometric conclusions
    that relate distance to theories of vision, representation, and
    techniques of observation in the field. This paper clarifies
    the principles behind methods of dealing with the perspective
    of space, in contrast to those dealing with the perspective of
    objects, and examines the perspective method of Pomponius Gauricus,
    contrasting it with the method of Alberti. Finally the symmetry
    of the perspective plane is discussed. 
    From the Vaults of Heaven Marco
    Jaff (Spring 2003) Many
    clues lead Marco Jaff to conjecture that Brunelleschi knew about
    the use of the astrolabe, an instrument very often used in his
    times; among his friendships we find the astronomer Paolo Dal
    Pozzo and engineer Mariano di Jacopo da Siena, who certainly
    knew how to use the astrolabe accurately. Because this instrument
    is based on the principle of stereographic projection, a particular
    kind of central projection, it is quite possible that Filippo
    applied this principle either for the perspective construction
    outline for Masaccio's Trinità in S. Maria Novella, as
    well as for the two lost panels of the Baptistery of Florence. 
    Speculations on the Origins
    of Linear Perspective Richard Talbot (Spring 2003) Richard Talbot demonstrates
    an approach and method for constructing perspectival space that
    may account for many of the distinguishing spatial and compositional
    features of key Renaissance paintings. The aim of the paper is
    also to show that this approach would not necessarily require,
    as a prerequisite, any understanding of the geometric basis and
    definitions of linear perspective as established by Alberti.
    The author discusses paintings in which the spatial/geometric
    structure has often defied conventional reconstruction when the
    strict logic of linear perspective is applied. 
    Visual sensibility in Antiquity
    and the Renaissance: The Diminution of the Classical Column
    David A. Vila Domini (Spring 2003) David Vila Domini looks at the recommendations
    regarding optical adjustment of the columnar diminution in the
    architectural treatises of Vitruvius, Alberti, and Palladio.
    He examines the variation in diminution of column thickness according
    to the height of the column, and its implications for our understanding
    of the various practices with regard both to columnar proportion
    and visual sensibility in Antiquity and the Renaissance. He also
    examines possible sources for the methods by which the ratios
    of column height to diameter were derived. 
    How Should We Measure an Ancient
    Structure? Harrison Eiteljorg, II (Autumn 2002) Harrison Eiteljorg,
    II, examines the questions of precision and accuracy in the measurement
    of ancient buildings, taking into account the separate requirements
    of both scholarship and preservation. Modern technology has changed
    matters significantly and promises to continue to bring change.
    Whereas the problem was once measuring as precisely as possible
    or as precisely as a scaled drawing could display, the problem
    is now to measure and record as precisely as required for the
    particular project. For each survey project, the answer must
    be unique, but it must be well and carefully argued with respect
    to the tools at hand and the subject. It is no longer appropriate
    to assume that the most precise measurements are necessary. Technology
    has advanced; now the decisions are ours. 
    The Double Möbius Strip Studies
    Vesna Petresin and Laurent-Paul Robert (Autumn 2002) The curious single
    continuous surface named after astronomer and mathematician August
    Ferdinand Möbius has only one side and one edge. But it
    was only in the past century that attention in mathematics was
    drawn to studies of hyper- and fractal dimensions. As Vesna Petresin
    and Laurent-Paul Robert show, the Möbius strip has a great
    potential as an architectural form, but we can also use its dynamics
    to reveal the mechanisms of our perception (or rather, its deceptions
    as in the case of optical illusions) in an augmented space-time. 
    Villard de Honnecourt and Euclidian
    Geometry Marie-Thérèse Zenner
    (Autumn 2002) In
    this reprint from a popular science journal, Marie-Thérèse
    Zenner presents a brief overview of the survival of Latin Euclid
    within the practical geometry tradition of builders, taking examples
    from an eleventh-century French Romanesque church, Saint-Etienne
    in Nevers, and a thirteenth-century Picard manuscript of drawings
    (Paris, Bibliothèque nationale, MS fr. 19093), known as
    the portfolio of Villard de Honnecourt. 
    Mathematics and Design: Yes, But
    Will it Fly? Martin Davis and Matt Insall (Autumn
    2002) Martin Davis
    and Matt Insall discuss a quote by Richard W. Hamming about the
    physical effect of Lebesgue and Riemann integrals and whether
    it made a difference whether one or the other was used, for example,
    in the design of an airplane. The gist of Hamming's quote was
    that the fine points of mathematical analysis are not relevant
    to engineering considerations. 
    A Light, Six-Sided, Paradoxical
    Fight Marco Frascari (Spring 2002) Built structures and their architectural
    representations are places where geometry, mathematics and construction
    discover their common nature, that is, the capability of human
    imagination to merge architectural objects with the telling of
    enjoyable tales. In this ppaer Marco Frascari takes aim at the
    forces that have shaped a system of critical thoughts on how
    to fight gravity with a happy architecture based on light structures
    combined with the dilettante's approaches to hexagonal design,
    interweaving the thoughts of Alberti, Kahn and Le Ricolais with
    those of master story-tellers Calvino and Rebelais. 
    The Fire Tower Elena
    Marchetti and Luisa Rossi Costa  (English
    version) (Spring 2002) The
    Fire Tower was a project by Johannes Itten, one of the most
    important exponents of the Bauhaus movement. The aim of this
    paper by Elena Marchetti and Luisa Rossi Costa is to describe
    the shape of The Fire Tower with the language of linear
    algebra and give a virtual reconstruction, in order to understand
    how Itten managed to concretise his strong mathematical intuition
    in an artistic form, even though he was unable to formalise it
    entirely with adequate instruments. 
    La Torre di Fuoco Elena
    Marchetti and Luisa Rossi Costa  (versione
    italiana) (Spring 2002) La Torre del Fuoco
    è un progetto di Johannes Itten, uno dei più importanti
    esponenti del Bauhaus. Scopo del presente lavoro di Elena Marchetti
    e Luisa Rossi Costa è quello di descrivere la forma della
    Torre del Fuoco attraverso il linguaggio dell'algebra
    lineare e di darne una ricostruzione virtuale, nella consapevolezza
    di quanto Itten fosse capace di concretizzare nell'arte il suo
    forte intuito matematico, pur non potendo formalizzarlo fino
    in fondo con adeguati strumenti. 
    The Golden Section in Architectural
    Theory Marcus Frings (Winter 2002) In the never-ending
    - but always young - discussion about the Golden Section in architecture
    never lacks the hint at Luca Pacioli and the architectural theory.
    But what always lacks is a thorough study of this topic, the
    Golden Section in architectural theory. The paper aims to present
    this analysis. Marcus Frings traces Golden Section from the mathematical
    and rather theoretical character of Pacioli's concept, examines
    Alberti, Serlio, Palladio and other architectural treatises,
    to arrive to Adolf Zeising in the nineteenth century and to theorist
    Matila Ghyka and the practitioners Ernst Neufert and Le Corbusier
    in the twentieth. In the latter's writings and designs the Golden
    Section seems to play the role of a scholarly element which shows
    the master's theoretical erudition, leading to contemporary architects
    such as Ricardo Bofill. 
    The Pythagopod Christopher
    Glass (Winter 2002) In
    1967 lecture at Yale Architecture School Anne Tyng discussed
    integrating of the five Pythagorean solids into a single shape
    and suggested the shape as an architectural solid. Christopher
    Glass aim is to sphere the cube in the manner of Buckminster
    Fuller, but with reference not only to the engineering models
    he uses but to the cultural models of the Pythagorean proportions
    as well. The author has developed computer models of the resulting
    plan at least two scales: the original glass house and a smaller
    hermitage pod. 
    More True Applications of the Golden
    Number Dirk Huylebrouck and Patrick Labarque
    (Winter 2002) Dirk
    Huylebrouck and Patrick Labarque try to provide a positive answer
    to the question that the golden section corresponds to an optimal
    solution. It is but a college-level rephrasing exercise, but
    it could reboot the mathematical career of the golden section.
    An extension to the related silver section is given as well.
    The authors betin their examination with the definition of the
    golden number, then proceed to its applications to architecture,
    grey-tone mixing, colour mixing and bicycle gears. 
    Spirals and the Golden
    Section John Sharp (Winter 2002) The Golden Section is a fascinating topic
    that continually generates new ideas. It also has a status that
    leads many people to assume its presence when it has no relation
    to a problem. It often forces a blindness to other alternatives
    when intuition is followed rather than logic. Mathematical inexperience
    may also be a cause of some of these problems. In the following,
    my aim is to fill in some gaps, so that correct value judgements
    may be made and to show how new ideas can be developed on the
    rich subject area of spirals and the Golden section. The paper
    is divided into four parts: Introduction; Types of spirals; Spirals
    from the Golden rectangle, Triangles and the pentagon by approximation;
    Mathematics of true Golden Section spirals; The myth of the nautilus
    shell. 
    Palladio's Villa Emo: The Golden Proportion
    Theory Rebutted Lionel March (Autumn 2001) In a most thoughtful
    and persuasive paper [Fletcher 2000], Rachel Fletcher comes close
    to convincing that Palladio may well have made use of the 'golden
    section', or extreme and mean ratio, in the design of the Villa
    Emo at Fanzolo. What is surprising is that a visually gratifying
    result is so very wrong when tested by the numbers. Lionel March
    provides an arithmetic analysis of the dimensions provided by
    Palladio in the Quattro libri to reach new conclusions
    about Palladio's design process. 
    Palladio's Villa Emo: The Golden
    Proportion Theory Defended Rachel Fletcher (Autumn
    2001) At Nexus 2000,
    Rachel Fletcher argued that Palladio may well have made use of
    the 'golden section', or extreme and mean ratio, in the design
    of the Villa Emo at Fanzolo. In the Autumn, 2001 issue of Nexus
    Network Journal, Lionel March argued that the Golden Section
    is nowhere to be found in the Villa Emo as described in I
    quattro libri dell'archittetura. In the present paper, Rachel
    Fletcher defends her original thesis, comparing the Villa Emo
    as actually built to the project for it that Palladio published
    in his book. 
    Rosettes and Other Arrangements of
    Circles Paul L. Rosin (Autumn 2001) The process of design in art and architecture
    generally involves the combination and manipulation of a relatively
    small number of geometric elements to create both the underlying
    structures as well as the overlaid decorative details. In this
    paper we concentrate on patterns created by copies of just a
    single geometric form - the circle. The circle is an extremely
    significant shape. By virtue of its simplicity and its topology
    it has been highly esteemed by many different cultures for millennia,
    symbolising God, unity, perfection, eternity, stability, etc.
    For instance, Ralph Waldo Emerson considered the circle to be
    "the highest emblem in the cipher of the world" 
    Violins and Volutes: Visual Parallels
    between Music and Architecture Åke Ekwall
    (Autumn 2001) In
    early Greek architecture, above all in the Ionic order, the volute
    was developed with particular perfection and grace. From 1957
    to 1965, I carried out an extensive investigation into how the
    violin acquired its singular shape. One aspect of violins that
    I studied was the strong spiral line of the f-holes and scroll.
    The present paper compares the constructions of Vitruvius, Alberti
    and Palladio for the volute to my own analyses performed on the
    scrolls of historic violins. It also seeks a parallel for constructions
    of volutes with arcs of different degrees in the volutes of the
    Medici Chapel by Michelangelo. 
    Group Theory and Architecture
    II: Why Symmetry/Asymmetry?  Michael Leyton
    (Autumn 2001) This
    is the second in a sequence of tutorials on the mathematical
    structure of architecture. The first was Group Theory and Architecture 1 (NNJ vol. 3 no. 3 Summer 2001).
    The purpose of these tutorials is to present, in an easy form,
    the technical theory developed in Leyton's book, A
    Generative Theory of Shape [Springer-Verlag,
    2001], on the mathematical structure of design. In this second tutorial Michael Leyton
    looks at the functional role of symmetry and asymmetry in
    architecture. 
    Gothic Flemish Town Halls In
    and Around Flanders, 1350-1550: A Geometric Analysis
    Han Vandevyvere (Summer 2001) Han Vandevyvere undertakes an investigation
    into some geometrical schemes that can be supposed to underlie
    the plans and facades of a number of Flemish Gothic town halls.
    Among the most famous of them, we can mention Brussels, Louvain,
    Oudenaarde and Bruges, all of them built from the late 14th till
    the early 16th century. To govern his study he founded a set
    of basic ordering rules: a search for simple series of integer
    numbers, so as to obtain simple
    ratios between the dimensions; a check to see that what is found
    to set up a plan is also found in the elevations; the preferential
    use of geometrical constructions that can easily be constructed
    with the compass and the carpenter's square; checking the design
    in the measurement units that were in use at the moment and place
    of construction; a check for the use of construction based on
    a circle, its inscribed square and equilateral triangle. 
    The Engineering Achievements of Hardy
    Cross Leonard K. Eaton (Summer 2001) Leonard K. Eaton resurrects
    the reputation of Hardy Cross, developer of the "moment
    distribution method" and one of America's most brilliant
    engineers. The structural calculation of a large reinforced concrete
    building in the nineteen fifties was a complicated affair. It
    is a tribute to the engineering profession, and to Hardy Cross,
    that them were so few failures. When architects and engineers
    had to figure out what was happening in a statically indeterminate
    frame, they inevitably turned to what was generally known as
    the "moment distribution" or "Hardy Cross"
    method. Although the Cross method has been superseded by more
    powerful procedures such as the Finite Element Method, the "moment
    distribution method" made possible the efficient and safe
    design of many reinforced concrete buildings during an entire
    generation. 
    Euclidism and Theory of Architecture
    Michele Sbacchi (Summer 2001) Michele Sbacchi examines the impact of
    the discipline of Euclidean geometry upon architecture and, more
    specifically, upon theory of architecture. Special attention
    is given to the work of Guarino Guarini, the 17th century Italian
    architect and mathematician who, more than any other architect,
    was involved in Euclidean geometry. Furthermore, the analysis
    shows how, within the realm of architecture, a complementary
    opposition can be traced between what is called "Pythagorean
    numerology" and "Euclidean geometry." These two
    disciplines epitomized two overlapping ways of conceiving architectural
    design. 
    Group Theory and Architecture
    I: Nested Symmetry  Michael Leyton (Summer
    2001) The present
    series of articles by Michael Leyton, of which this is the first,
    will give an introduction to a comprehensive theory of design
    based on group theory in an intuitive form, and build up any
    needed group theory through tutorial passages. The articles will
    begin by assuming that the reader has no knowledge of group theory,
    and we will progressively add more and more group theory in an
    easy form, until we finally are able to get to quite difficult
    topics in tensor algebras, and give a group-theoretic analysis
    of complex buildings such as those of Peter Eisenman, Zaha Hadid,
    Frank Gehry, Coop Himmelblau, Rem Koolhaas, Daniel Libeskind,
    Greg Lynn, and Bernard Tschumi. This first article is on a subject
    of considerable psychological relevance: nested symmetries. 
    Applications of a New Property
    of Conics to Architecture: An Alternative Design Project for
    Rio de Janeiro Metropolitan Cathedral Juan
    V. Martín Zorraquino, Francisco Granero Rodríguez
    and José Luis Cano Martín (Spring 2001) This paper describes
    the mathematical discovery of a new property of conics which
    allows the development of numerous geometric projects for use
    in architectural and engineering applications. Illustrated is
    an architectural application in the form of an alternative project
    for Río de Janeiro Metropolitan Cathedral featuring of
    the the integration of a ellipical base and a cross in the top
    plane. Two alternative designs are presented for the cathedral,
    based on the choice of either the Latin or Greek cross. 
    Modularity and the Number of Design
    Choices Nikos Salingaros and Débora
    M. Tejada (Spring 2001) Nikos
    Salingaros and Débora Tejada analyze one aspect of what
    is commonly understood as "modularity" in the architectural
    literature. There are arguments to be made in favor of modularity,
    but the authors argue against empty modularity, using mathematics
    to prove their point. If we have a large quantity of structural
    information, then modular design can organize this information
    to prevent randomness and sensory overload. In that case, the
    module is not an empty module, but a rich, complex module containing
    a considerable amount of substructure. Empty modules, on the
    other hand, eliminate internal information, and their repetition
    eliminates information from the entire region that they cover.
    Modularity works in a positive sense only when there is substructure
    to organize. 
    On Precision in Architecture
    Costantino Caciagli  (English
    version) (Spring 2001) In
    architecture, the term precision, in the sense of "respect
    for order and exactness", says everything and nothing. In
    fact, "precision in architecture" can be used in reference
    to diverse aspects such as the carrying out of program functions,
    to execution, to forms, to distribution of forces, to dimensions,
    but we could never arrive at a conclusion if the characteristics
    taken into consideration were not commensurable to a reference
    sample. 
    A proposito della precisione
    in architettura Costantino Caciagli  (versione
    italiana)(Spring 2001)  Precisione,
    nel senso di "rispetto dell'ordine e dell'esattezza",
    in architettura dice tutto e non dice nulla, infatti ci si può
    riferire allo svolgimento delle funzioni alla esecuzione, alle
    forme,alla distribuzione dei pesi, delle dimensioni, ma non potremmo
    arrivare a nessuna conclusione, se i caratteri presi in considerazione
    non sono commensurati ad un campione di riferimento. 
    Iannis Xenakis - Architect of
    Light and Sound Alessandra Capanna  (English
    version) (Spring 2001) Alessandra
    Capanna summarizes the life and work of Iannis Xenakis, who passed
    away on 4 February 2001.He was a musician, but above all he was
    a theorist and pure researcher who used mathematical thought
    as a basis for of his compositions. Because of this, his way
    of working more closely resembles that of a philosopher of science
    than that of an artist, whose instinctive creations are sometimes
    controlled only by aesthetical aims. he was also an architect.
    In 1956 Le Corbusier entrusted his sketches for the Philips Pavilion
    for the Brussels World's Fair to Xenakis, who was charged to
    translate them through mathematics. 
    Iannis Xenakis -- Architetto
    della luce e dei suoni Alessandra Capanna  (versione
    italiana) (Spring 2001)  Alessandra
    Capanna ripercorre il carierra di Iannis Xenakis, uno dei musicisti
    contemporanei più celebri, scomparso il 4 febbraio 2001.
    Un musicista, ma anche un teorico e un ricercatore puro che,
    ponendo alla base di tutte le sue articolazioni compositive il
    pensiero matematico. Era anche un'architetto. In ottobre del
    1956 che egli ricevette da Le Corbusier l'incarico di tradurre
    attraverso la matematicai suoi schizzi per la Padiglione
    Philips per l'Expo di Bruxelles. 
    "Fractal Architecture":
    Late Twentieth Century Connections Between Architecture and Fractal
    Geometry Michael J. Ostwald (Winter 2001) For more than two decades
    an intricate and contradictory relationship has existed between
    architecture and the sciences of complexity. While the nature
    of this relationship has shifted and changed throughout that
    time a common point of connection has been fractal geometry.
    Both architects and mathematicians have each offered definitions
    of what might, or might not, constitute fractal architecture.
    Curiously, there are few similarities between architects' and
    mathematicians' definitions of "fractal architecture".
    There are also very few signs of recognition that the other side's
    opinion exists at all. Practising architects have largely ignored
    the views of mathematicians concerning the built environment
    and conversely mathematicians have failed to recognise the quite
    lengthy history of architects appropriating and using fractal
    geometry in their designs. Even scholars working on concepts
    derived from both architecture and mathematics seem unaware of
    the large number of contemporary designs produced in response
    to fractal geometry or the extensive record of contemporary writings
    on the topic. The present paper begins to address this lacuna. 
    Analysis and Synthesis in Architectural
    Designs:A Study in Symmetry Jin-Ho Park
    (Winter 2001) Ordered
    designs are frequently encountered in art and architecture. The
    underlying structure of their spatial logic may be discussed
    with regard to the use of symmetry principles in mathematics.
    In architectural designs, the use of symmetry may sometimes be
    apparent immediately by just looking at designs, although the
    final design is seemingly asymmetrical; or various symmetries
    are manifested in the parts of the designs, yet not immediately
    recognizable despite an almost obsessive concern for symmetry.
    At this point, it is crucial to develop a formal methodology
    that may clearly elucidate different hierarchical levels of the
    use of symmetry in architectural designs.In an effort to do this,
    before proceeding to analytic and synthetic applications, we
    discuss a methodology founded on the algebraic structure of the
    symmetry group of a regular polygon in mathematics. The approach
    shows how various types of symmetry are superimposed in individual
    designs, and illustrates how symmetry may be employed strategically
    in the design process. Analytically, by viewing architectural
    designs in this way, symmetry, which is superimposed in several
    layers in a design, becomes transparent. Synthetically, architects
    can benefit from being conscious of using group operations and
    spatial transformations associated with symmetry in compositional
    and thematic development. The advantage of operating with symmetry
    concepts in this way is to provide architects with an explicit
    method not only for the understanding of symmetrical structures
    of sophisticated designs, but also to give architects insights
    for the construction of new designs by using symmetry operations. 
    The Squaring of the Circle in two
    Early Norwegian Cathedrals? Dag Nilsen (Winter
    2001) The squaring
    of the circle is impossible, but it can be represented geometrically,
    as demonstrated by Dr.-Ing. Helmut Sander in "A
    geometrical ensemble to generate the squaring of the circle".
    I immediately recognized his diagram as being very close to a
    diagram that I have found by analyzing two early Norwegian basilican- plan cathedrals, and which,
    at first glance, I believed might have been used in determining
    the ratios between some important dimensions. This spurred me
    to make further investigations, revealing that it was not quite
    that simple. However, this pursuit revealed some alternative,
    but related possibilities, including a way of combining Ö2 and Ö5
    -- albeit approximately, but close enough to fool a non-mathematician
    working by small-scale geometry into make a false assumption
    similar to Le Corbusier's when he was developing the Modulor. 
    The Arithmetic of Nicomachus
    of Gerasa and its Applications to Systems of Proportion
    Jay Kappraff (October 2000) Nicomachus
    of Gerasa has gained a position of importance in the history
    of ancient mathematics due in great measure to his Introduction
    to Arithmetic, one of the only surviving documentations of
    Greek number theory. Prof. Kappraff discusses a pair of tables
    of integers found in the Arithmetic and shows how they
    lead to a general theory of proportion, including the system
    of musical proportions developed by the neo-Platonic Renaissance
    architects Leon Battista Alberti and Andrea Palladio, the Roman
    system of proportions described by Theon of Smyrna, and the Modulor
    of Le Corbusier. This paper appears
    in print in Nexus Network
    Journal 2 (2000): 41-55. 
    Introduction to Slavik Jablan's Modular
    Games Donald W. Crowe (October
    2000) Donald Crowe,
    Professor emeritus of mathematics at the University of Wisconsin
    and known for his collaboration with Dorothy Washburn on the
    book Symmetries of Culture : Theory and Practice of Plane
    Pattern Analysis, introduces a new interactive tiling program
    by Slavik Jablan called Modular Games, also published
    in the issue of the NNJ. Prof. Crowe provides an overview
    of the program's function as well as a brief background to the
    concepts of tiling and combinatorials. This
    paper appears in print in Nexus
    Network Journal 2 (2000): 15-16. 
    Modular
    Games Slavik Jablan (October 2000) Slavik Jablan, editor of the e-journal
    VisMath,
    has created an interactive tiling program for the NNJ.
    Jablan presents four sets of prototiles called OpTiles,
    SpaceTiles, Orn(amental)Tiles and KnotTiles.
    Each involves a small set of square tiles which can be combined
    by the reader in various orientations and reversals to make a
    bewildering array of designs and patterns. The reader may contemplate
    his or her constructions at leisure, and with a simple inkjet
    printer they can be printed out to use in any way you like. This program appears as a Supplementary CD to
    the Nexus Network
    Journal 2 (2000). 
    Hugues Libergier and His Instruments
    Nancy Wu (October 2000). One
    of the most frequently illustrated images of a medieval architect
    is the tomb slab of Hugues Libergier, architect of the Abbey
    of Saint-Nicaise in Reims. Hugues (d. 1263) is immortalized by
    a famous effigy now found in the Cathedral of Reims. As might
    be expected from the effigy of an architect, it is accompanied
    by several instruments of his profession: a square, a compass,
    and a measuring rod. These instruments are frequently found in
    conjunction with the representation of architects, on tomb slabs,
    sculpture, in construction scenes on manuscript pages or stained
    glass panels, the subject of study by scholars in search of the
    secrets of medieval construction. This
    paper appears in print in Nexus
    Network Journal 2 (2000): 93-102. 
    Methodology in Architecture
    and Mathematics: Nexus 2000 Round Table Discussion
    Carol Martin Watts, Moderator (October 2000). The
    Nexus 2000 round table discussion on methodology in architecture
    and mathematics took place on Tuesday 6 June during the course
    of the Nexus 2000 conference in Ferrara, Italy. Moderated by
    Carol Martin Watts, the panelists were Rachel Fletcher, Paul
    Calter, William D. (Bill) Sapp and Mark Reynolds. This report
    is a transcript of the audio tapes made during the discussion,
    which covered three areas: 
    PART I: HOW IMPORTANT IS ACCURACY?
     PART II: WHAT IS THE NATURE OF MATHEMATICS? PART III: HOW DO WE DIFFER IN OUR APPROACHES TO THE
    WHOLE RELATIONSHIPS OF MATHEMATICS AND ARCHITECTURE BASED ON
    OUR DISCIPLINES?
    The workshop discussion appears in
    print in Nexus Network
    Journal 2 (2000): 105-130. 
    The Relationship Between Architecture
    and Mathematics in the Pantheon Giangiacomo Martines
    (July 2000). An
    examination of the latest Pantheon studies illustrates the newest
    theories of relationships between architecture and mathematics
    in Rome's most celebrated building. This paper was presented
    at the Nexus 2000 conference on architecture and mathematics,
    4-7 June 2000, Ferrara, Italy. Many studies on the Pantheon are
    carried out far from Rome and so ideas on the monument cannot
    be checked easily or frequently. For this reason, a group of
    architects and archaeologists are working in Rome , trying to
    resolve some seemingly banal but still unanswered questions.
    For instance, one question that is often asked is: Could the
    inside of the Pantheon have been an astronomical observatory?
    This paper appears in print in Nexus Network Journal 2 (2000):
    57-61. 
    How to Construct a Logarithmic Rosette
    (Without Even Knowing It) Paul Calter (April
    2000) Paul Calter
    explains what a logarithmic rosette is and gives some examples
    of their occurrence in pavements. Then he gives a simple construction
    method which is totally geometric and requires no calculation.
    He then proves that it gives a logarithmic rosette, with the
    exception that the spirals are made up of straight-line segments
    rather than curved ones. This paper
    appears in print in Nexus
    Network Journal 2 (2000): 25-31. 
    Under Siege: The Golden Mean in
    Architecture Michael Ostwald (April 2000) Michael Ostwald
    briefly describes the Golden Mean and its history before examining
    the stance taken by a number of recent authors investigating
    the Golden Mean in architecture. He addresses the theories of
    Husserl, Derrida and Ingraham, who separately affirm that tacit
    assumptions about the relationship between geometric forms and
    other forms - say geometry and architecture - must be constantly
    questioned if they are to retain any validity. This
    paper appears in print in Nexus
    Network Journal 2 (2000): 75-81. 
    Pythagorean Triangles and the Musical
    Proportions Martin Euser (April
    2000) Martin Euser researches the factor root-(2N -
    1) and its interesting relations between musical proportions
    and Pythagorean triangles. The simple scheme N +/- root-N is
    also interesting as a generative set of pairs of numbers. This
    set looks like a prototype for the generative set of pairs of
    numbers discussed in a previous article by the author. The findings
    are presented summarily and it is left to the reader to elaborate
    upon them. This paper appears
    in print in Nexus Network
    Journal 2 (2000): 33-40. 
    Pavements as Embodiments of
    Meaning for a Fractal Mind Terry M. Mikiten, Nikos
    A. Salingaros, Hing-Sing Yu (April 2000) This paper puts forward a fractal theory
    of the human mind that explains one aspect of how we interact
    with our environment. Some interesting analogies are developed
    for storing ideas and information within a fractal scheme. The
    mind establishes a connection with the environment by processing
    information, this being an important theme seen during the evolution
    of the brain. The authors assert that pavements play a role in
    connecting human beings to surrounding structures by acting as
    a vehicle for conveying meaning, and argue that the design on
    pavements transfers meaning from our surroundings to our awareness.
    This paper appears in print in Nexus Network Journal 2 (2000):
    63-74. 
    Pisa baptistry is giant musical
    instrument, computers show Rory Carroll (April
    2000) A music professor
    at the University of Pisa and a Catholic priest have joined forces
    to show that the extraordinary acoustics of the Baptistery in
    Pisa are intentional and that it is a large musical instrument. 
    The Architecture of Curved Shapes
    Kazimierz Butelski (January 2000) In the 20th century, architecture remains
    the part of art where formal principles are very important for
    creators and spectators. Because form in architecture is so important,
    two questions arise: How can architects nowadays create forms?
    How can forms be described and classified? When we work only
    with formal analysis, we can point to an important criterion
    of innovation, that is, that certain forms have never before
    been seen in the history of architecture. In
    the present day, CAD/CAM technology permits us to realize any
    form our imaginations can create. This
    paper appears in print in Nexus
    Network Journal 2 (2000): 19-25. 
    Environmental Patterns: Paving Designs
    by Tess Jaray Kim Williams (January 2000) There is no greater
    opportunity for mathematics and architecture to interact than
    in paving designs. Where walls are often broken by windows, doors
    and pilasters, or are covered by paintings, and ceilings (especially
    modern ceilings) are occupied by lighting fixtures, air vents
    and smoke alarms (once called "ceiling acne" by architect
    Robert Stern), floors are usually large unbroken surfaces. For
    this reason, pavement design has flourished from ancient times.
    Kim Williams discusses the pavements for urban centers and
    public spaces designed by British Artist Tess Jaray. Jaray's
    patterns are derived from the proportional properties of the
    bricks she uses, and are inspired by the centuries' old masonry
    tradition. Jaray's designs are a geometric link between architecture
    and mathematics. This paper appears
    in print in Nexus Network
    Journal 2 (2000): 87-92. 
    A Geometrical Ensemble to Generate
    the Squaring of the Circle Helmut Sander  (English version) (January
    2000) The purely
    geometrical squaring of the circle with straightedge and compass
    is possible only within the tolerance of an approximation. But
    knowing the value of the irrational number pi of the circle
    (p = 3,14159265
    ...), it is possible to transform it as a line or rather
    as a shape of a circle or a square. This
    paper appears in print in Nexus
    Network Journal 2 (2000): 83-85. 
    Ein Schaubild zur Kreisquadratur
    Helmut Sander  (Deutsche
    Version) (January 2000) Die
    rein geometrische Kreisquadratur init Zirkel und Lineal hat sich
    längst als nur annähernd möglich erwiesen. Weil
    aber die Kreiszahl Pi mit p
    = 3,14159265... bekannt ist, lässt sie sich trotzdem als
    Strecke und sogar als Kreis- oder Quadratfläche darstellen. 
    In the Footsteps of the Prince: A Look at Renaissance Ferrara
    Charles M. Rosenberg. (October 1999) The narrow cobblestone streets of Ferrara,
    some scarcely wider than a footpath, give a real sense of what
    the city was like in the middle ages and early Renaissance: the
    Via Chiodaiuoli, street of the ironmongers, crossed by a file
    of slim, brick buttresses; the Via Ragno, lined by typical red-brick
    houses with protruding sporti; the dramatic Via Volte,
    bridged by a succession of enormous pointed vaults supporting
    the second and third stories of buildings which actually span
    the roadway; the still vibrant arcaded commercial Via Romano,
    as well as the more twisting paths in the district of the castrum.
    The history of Ferrara and its princes has left a clear and readable
    imprint on the city's streets, palaces and churches. Written
    in their stones is the memory of what has gone before. (Ferrara was the site of the Nexus
    2000 conference on architecture and
    mathematics). No longer online, this paper appears in print
    in the Nexus Network
    Journal 1 (1999): 43-63. 
    A Comparative Geometric Analysis
    of the Heights and Bases of the Great Pyramid of Khufu and the
    Pyramid of the Sun at Teotihuacan Mark Reynolds.
    (October 1999) Looking
    back into the murky mysteries of ancient times, there are reminders
    of past glories in the art, architecture, and design of our ancestors,
    and, in the number systems they employed in those designs. These
    number systems were clearly expressed in the geometry they used.
    Among these works are the mammoth pyramids that dot the Earth's
    surface. Accurate in their placement as geodetic markers and
    mechanically sophisticated as astronomical observatories, these
    wonders of ancient science stand as reminders that our brethren
    of antiquity may well have known more than we think. This paper appears in print in Nexus Network Journal 1 (1999):
    23-42. 
    Study the Works of Peter Eisenman?
    Why?! Adriana Rossi  (English
    version). (October 1999) In
    architecture it is possible to demonstrate, as Peter Eisenman
    states, "...all the changes can in some way refer to cultural
    changes... the most tangible changes... were determinated by
    technological progress, by the development of new conditions
    of use and by the change in meaning of certain rituals and their
    field of representation" [Eisenman, 1989]. Thus in the simple
    use of geometric solids, he limits himself to the promotion of
    a language orientated with a correspondent systematic order.
    In the spatial manipulations of plans and sections, Eisenman
    experiments with the "laws of thought" (1854) put in
    place in the nineteenth century by George Boole and Augustus
    De Morgan. In the same way that the two English logicians brought
    to extreme consequences the Aristotelian syllogisms which prelude
    to mechanised reasoning, Peter Eisenman manipulates an idea,
    submitting it to a sort of propositional calculation. Through
    probings and attempts which follow each other in a sequence of
    approximations made possible by a new conception of notation
    and representation, and beginning with elementary solids or simple
    internal relations, architectural space takes shape. This paper appears in print in Nexus Network Journal 1 (1999):
    65-74. 
    Studiare le opere di Peter Eisenman?
    Perché?! Adriana Rossi  (versione
    italiana). (October 1999). In
    architettura, si può dimostrare -come afferma Peter Eisenman-
    che: "...tutti i cambiamenti possono in qualche modo far
    riferimento a cambiamenti culturali... i mutamenti più
    tangibili... sono stati determinati dal progresso tecnologico,
    dallo sviluppo di nuove condizioni d'uso e dal cambiamento del
    significato di certi rituali e del loro campo di rappresentazione"
    [Eisenman, 1989]. Cosicchè nel fare semplice uso di solidi
    geometrici, si limita a promuovere un linguaggio orientato insieme
    a un corrispondente ordine sistematico. Nelle manipolazioni spaziali
    di piante e sezioni Eisenman sperimenta le "Leggi del pensiero"
    (1854), messe a punto nell'ottocento da George Boole e Augustus
    De Morgan. Come i due logici inglesi portavano alle estreme conseguenze
    i sillogismi aristoteliani che preludono ai ragionamenti meccanizzati,
    così Peter Eisenman manipola l'idea, sottoponendola ad
    una sorta di calcolo proposizionale. 
    Architectural Traces of an Admirable Cipher: Eleven in
    the Opus of Carlo Scarpa Marco
    Frascari. (July 1999) Consciously
    or unconsciously, part of the apparatus that architects use in
    their daily fabrications of the built environment grows out of
    their understanding of numbers and numerals. Embodied in tectonic
    events and parts, numbers hinge the past and the future of buildings
    and their inhabitants into a search for a way of life with no
    impairment caused by psychic activity. Whether sensible or intelligible,
    tectonic numbers articulate the vigor of human mind's eye, and
    ultimately they refer to psychic regimes immersed in the vital
    ocean of imagination and wonder. The essential influence on Scarpa's
    numerical thinking is the combinatorial procedures devised by
    Raymond Roussel for writing his books, the upturned geometry
    of Rene A. Schwaller De Lubicz and Surrealistic processes of
    invention. Scarpa's architecture is a prudent and playful project
    that relates to the traces of numbers embodied in a tradition.
    In Scarpa's opus, it is true that One and One Equals Two,
    but it is also wonderfully true that A Pair of Ones Makes
    an Eleven. No longer available online,
    this paper appears in print in Nexus
    Network Journal 1 (1999): 7-21. 
    Architecture and Mathematics in the Gothic of the Mendicants
    Marcello Spigaroli  (English
    version) (July 1999) The universal essence of beauty consists
    of the resplendence of form on the material parts in proportion. This luminous statement
    by Albertus Magnus could be chosen as the synthesis of the esthetic
    thought of the thirteenth century, and more generally, of the
    entire late medieval period. The whole range of philosophy and
    science of this period centers on the theme of proportional relationships
    as the origin of unity, coherence and the intelligibility of
    the universe and its infinite parts. From the mendicant orders
    would come the major exponents of the scientific philosophy,
    the assumptions of which hinged on the principle of proportions.
    The city is the theatre where beauty and truth coincide in celebration
    of political power founded on a mercantile economy, justifying
    at once an ideology and a way of life. No
    longer available online, this paper appears in print in Nexus Network Journal 1 (1999):
    105-115. 
    The Sky Within: Mathematical Aesthetics of Persian Dome
    Interiors Reza Sarhangi. (July 1999) In the absence of metal beams, domes had
    been an essential part of the architecture of official and religious
    buildings around the world for several centuries. Domes were
    used to bring the brick structure of the building to conclusion.
    Based on their spherical constructions, they provided strength
    to the building foundations and also made the structure more
    resistant against snow and wind. Besides bringing a sense of
    strength and protection, the interior designs and decorations
    resemble sky, heaven, and what a person may expect to see beyond
    "seven skies." Some contemporary religious buildings
    or memorials still incorporate domes, no longer out of necessity,
    but rather based on tradition or for esthetical purposes. Yet
    the quality of the interior decoration of these new domes is
    diminishing. The aim of this article is to study the spatial
    effects created by dome interior designs and to provide information
    about construction of such a design. Decorations in dome interiors
    demonstrate art forms such as stucco, tessellated work, ceramics,
    paintings, mirror work, and brick pattern construction, as well
    as combinations of these forms. No longer
    available online, This paper appears in print in Nexus Network Journal 1 (1999):
    87-97. 
    Architecture, Patterns and Mathematics
    Nikos Salingaros (April 1999) One
    of the roles served by architecture is that of offering professionals
    and laymen alike the possibility to experience mathematical pattern.
    Nikos Salingaros examines how the revolution in architectural
    style at the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning
    of the twentieth, aimed at banishing an irrevelant architectural
    ornamentation, also banished pattern from architecture, much
    to the detriment of man's experience of the built environment.
    Using the architecture of Mies van der Rohe and Le Corbusier
    and the theories of Christopher Alexander as a base, the author
    explains the malady and the cure for twentieth century architecture.
    This paper appears in print in the Nexus Network Journal 1 (1999):
    75-85. 
    Cosmati Pavements at Westminster Abbey John
    Sharp (April 1999). Architecture
    in thirteenth century England was as much of a textbook as it
    was a shelter. John Sharp examines one of the most beautiful
    "texts": the decorated pavements created by Cosmati
    artists for Henry III. Besides explaining technical details of
    the panels such as materials and workmanship, Sharp reveals the
    number symbolism of the inscription that surrounds the Great
    Pavement, showing how sacred meaning was encrypted in a mathematical
    symbol system. No longer available online,
    this paper appears in print in Nexus
    Network Journal 1 (1999): 99-104. 
    Spirals and Rosettes in Architectural Ornament Kim
    Williams (April 1999). By
    now noted for both its frequency and its many variations in nature,
    the spiral has inspired architectural forms for many centuries.
    The logarithmic spiral was adapted by the Greeks for the ionic
    volute; many generations of architects developed geometrical
    constructions to approximate the curves of the spiral. A development
    on the theme of the spiral is the fan pattern, in which spiral
    segments are translated about the center of a circle. The superimposition
    of opposing fan patterns results in the rosette. The easily-constructed
    circular rosette is an ancient and beautiful pavement pattern,
    and can be varied to lay the base for many other motives. No longer available online, This paper appears
    in print in Nexus Network
    Journal 1 (1999): 129-138. 
    Re-issued! The
    Mathematics of Palladio's Villas: Workshop '98 Stephen
    R. Wassell (April 1999) Stephen
    Wassell describes the aims and results of the 1998 and 1999 workshop
    tours of the villas of Renaissance architect Andrea Palladio.
    An interdisciplinary group of scholars took advantage of visits
    to nine villas in Italy's Veneto region to examine Palladio's
    use of proportions, geometry and symmetry. A review of the literature
    purtaining to Palladio's use of these mathematical principles
    sets the stage for new work to be produced by workshop participants.
    This paper appears in print in Nexus Network Journal 1 (1999):
    121-128. 
    Re-issued! "Triangulature"
    in Andrea Palladio Vera W. de Spinadel (January
    1999). At the June
    1998 workshop on the architecture of Andrea Palladio, the dimensions
    of the rooms were much remarked. Vera Spinadel convincingly argues
    that Palladio used precise mathematical relationships as a basis
    for selecting the numerical dimensions for the rooms in this
    villas. The integer dimensions are demonstrated to be approximants
    linked to continued equations, and a particular way of deriving
    these integers through the use of a continued fraction expansion
    that approximates by excess is introduced. This
    paper appears in print in Nexus
    Network Journal 1 (1999): 117-119. 
     
     
      Copyright ©2006 Kim Williams Books
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