Thursday 1 December 2016

9 MOST MATHEMATICALLY INTERESTING BUILDINGS IN THE WORLD


1)    The Great Pyramid of Giza, Cairo, Egypt




The superlatives that describe the Great Pyramid of Giza speaks for itself: its the largest and oldest of the three pyramids and was the tallest man-made structure in the world for 3,800 years, but there’s also plenty of math behind one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World.

Did you know that in cubits (the first recorded unit of length), the pyramid’s perimeter is 365.24 – the number of days in the year? That the pyramid’s perimeter divided by twice its height is equal to pi(3.1416)? Or that the King’s Chamber measurements are based on a Pythagorean triangle (3, 4, 5)?

2) Taj Mahal, Agra, India

Sitting firmly at the top of many traveler’s wish lists, the Taj Mahal in India is a delight for tourists, with many waiting to get that iconic photo in front of this beautiful building. But look closer and you’ll find a great example of line symmetry – with two lines, one vertical down the middle of the Taj, and one along the waterline, showing the reflection of the prayer towers in the water.



3) The Eden Project, Cornwall, UK

The Eden Project, in South West England, opened in 2001 and now ranks as one of the UK’s most popular tourist attractions. Although visitors come to check out what’s inside, the greenhouses –geodesic domes made up of hexagonal and pentagonal cells – are pretty neat too.

‘The Core’ was added to the site in 2005, an education center that shows the relationship between plants and people. It’s little surprise that the building has taken its inspiration from plants, using Fibonacci numbers to reflect the nature featured within the site.

There’s even more math to be found in the building structure, which is derived from phyllotaxis, the mathematical basis for most plant growth (opposing spirals are found in many plants, from pine cones to sunflower heads).



4) Parthenon, Athens, Greece

Constructed in 430 or 440 BC the Parthenon was built on the Ancient Greek ideals of harmony, demonstrated by the building’s perfect proportions. The width to height ratio of 9:4 governs the vertical and horizontal proportions of the temple as well as other relationships of the building, for example the spacing between the columns.

It’s also been suggested that the Parthenon’s proportions are based on the Golden Ratio (found in a rectangle whose sides are 1: 1.618).

The Ancient Greeks were resourceful in their quest for beauty – they knew that if they made their columns completely straight, an optical illusion would make them seem thinner in the middle, so they compensated for this by making their columns slightly thicker in the middle.



5) The Gherkin, London, UK

The Gherkin’s unusual design features – the round building, bulge in the middle, the narrow taper at the top and spiraling design – create an impact in more ways than you might think. The cylindrical shape minimizes whirlwinds that can form at the base of large buildings, something that can be predicted by computer modeling using the math of turbulence.

What’s more, the bulging middle and tapered top give the illusion of a shorter building that doesn’t block out sunlight, helping to maximize natural ventilation and saving on air conditioning, as well as lighting and heating bills. Built with the help of CAD (Computer Aided Design) and parametric modeling, the Gherkin is now a distinctive feature in London’s city skyline.



6) Chichen, Itza,Mexico

Chichen Itza was built by the Maya Civilization, who were known as fantastic mathematicians, credited with the inventing ‘zero’ within their counting system. At 78 feet tall, the structure of El Castillo (or ‘castle’) within Chichen Itza is based on the astrological system.

Some fast facts: the fifty two panels on each side of the pyramid represent the number of years in the Mayan cycle, the stairways dividing the eighteen tiers correspond to the Mayan calendar of eighteen months and the steps within El Castillo mirror the solar year, with a total of 365 steps, one step for each day of the year.

7) Sagrada Familia, Barcelona, Spain

Designed by Antoni Gaudi, the Sagrada Familia is one of Spain’s top tourist destinations. There’s plenty of math to get your teeth into too. Gaudi used hyperbolic paraboloid structures (a quadric surface, in this case a saddle-shaped doubly-ruled surface, that can be represented by the equation z = x2/a2 – y2/b2), which can be seen within particular façades.

The Sagrada Familia also features a Magic Square within the Passion façade – an arrangement where the numbers in all columns, rows and diagonals add up to the same sum: in this case, 33. The Magic Constant, or M is the constant sum in every row, column and diagonal and can be represented by the following formula M = n (n^2 +1)/2.


8 ) Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao, Spain

Bilbao may not be the first place you’d think to travel to in Spain, but the Guggenheim Museum certainly gives you a good excuse to pay this northern port city a visit. Since opening to the public in 1997, the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao has been celebrated as one of the most important buildings of the 20th century and it’s not hard to see why.

Intended to mimic a ship, the titanium panels, which look like fish scales, were designed to appear random but actually relied on Computer Aided Three Dimensional Interactive Application(CATIA). In fact, computer simulation made it possible to build the sorts of shapes that architects from earlier years could have only imagined.



9) Philips Pavilion, Brussels, Belgium

Known for great beer, delicious waffles and moules frites, if you visited Belgium’s capital Brussels in 1958, you would have most likely come across the Philips Pavilion instead. Commissioned by electronics company Philips, the Pavilion was a mind-boggling collection of asymmetric hyperbolic paraboloids and steel tension cables, intended to be used as a venue to showcase technological progress after the Second World War.


Refer from tripbase.com

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