Results 1 to 5 of 5
-
12-11-2012, 09:39 AM #1Registered User Promoted
- Join Date
- Mar 2006
- Location
- Ashland, OR
- Posts
- 1,386
Geodesic dome construction using roof planes
-
12-11-2012, 09:46 AM #2
Nice job Bill !
Can you explain the process?Joseph P. Carrick, Architect - AIA
ASUS M51AC Desktop, core i7-4770 CPU @3.4 GHZ, 16 GB Ram, NVidea GT640 with60M with 3GB GM, 30" HiRes (2560/1600) Monitor , (2) 24" ASUS Monitors
Windows 8.1
Chief Architect 9, 10, X1, X3, X4 Premium, X5 Premium, X6 Premium
-
12-11-2012, 09:58 AM #3Registered User Promoted
- Join Date
- Mar 2006
- Location
- Ashland, OR
- Posts
- 1,386
despite its apparent complexity, this is a very simple model.
There are only two triangle sizes involved here; with side lengths A,A,A, and side lengths A,B,B
There are a total of (40) triangles total, (30) A,B,B, and (10) A,A,A
Groups of five A,B,B, triangle form the basic pentagonal building blocks, while the A,A,A triangles fill in the voids between the pentangles.
All vertices are either A, or B, however, all but the horizontal vertices are fore shortened in plan view.
The regular polygon tool set for five sides, and ten sides at specific side lengths greatly speeds up the construction.
Attached is a plan file of the dome and its construction for anyone who might want to explore this.
-
12-18-2012, 06:08 PM #4
I had no experience i ge dome construction in our area, so understanding the triangles related to dome circles was more tougher to me to make this geo dome in chief using faces and the circles i initially posted with a video. This circles r the important parts of dome and created it using molding polylines.
Yusuf hassen/
engineer & architect.......
Win7 home premium,32bit,3GB ram ...
X2/X4 premium
Autocad 2010, Staadpro 2004.
-
12-19-2012, 08:31 AM #5Registered Abuser Demoted
- Join Date
- Jan 2005
- Location
- Reading. Pa area
- Posts
- 815
Seriously nice of you Bill. This should be in the Chief Manual somewhere and or one of their video tutorials. You made it look easy.
Correct me if I'm wrong but isn't this a 2V (2 frequency) 4/8 (or half) dome type? I found an out of print(I think) book that's available to read for free online @issuu.com/golfstromen/docs/lloyd-kahn1971 . The title of the book is Domebook 2 by Lloyd Kahn copyright 1971 and looks like a good read. Glance thru it and it's a very nice book on small scale residential geodesic dome construction. One of those good Mother Earth News hippie type well illustrated books that I've always loved.
I just finished a preliminary design for a client that wants to demo his dome but keep his 36" high masonry and frame base/knee walls and existing slab and interior plumbing. My footprint was a modified 10 sided (decagon?) with alternating 16' and 8' baseline "vertices". I've reluctantly replaced the dome with 97.125" 2X6 stud walls framed on top of the knee walls and roofed with a regular pentagonal center post supported 6/12 pitch roof structure.
Pending cost prohibitive pricing by the builder, they will hopefully just remodel the more conventional (albeit flat roofed) appendages. The owner is tired of leaking pentagonal skylights (recently replaced) and wants a conventional forced air hvac system. I will try to talk them out of removing the skylights until/if they would recommence leaking. If I have to replicate the dome via cad (on Chief), I will be using your method to properly draw this beauty. Thanks and have a great Christmas holiday season.-Brad
House was on the market in the burbs of Reading, Pa and listed for around $225k and getting no offers due to it's slightly awkward floor plan and lack of a true 2nd bedroom (which is being resolved in the remodel).Last edited by Bradley Boltz; 12-19-2012 at 08:33 AM. Reason: ooops.
Architect,NOT! (archnot@yahoo.com): Dell XPS 8300, i7-2600 3.40 GHZ Quad Core, Windows 7 Pro 64 bit, ATI-radeon HD 5700 1-gig(not by choice came with cpu), 8 GB RAM, 25" Hanspree HF 255 LCD Moniter- User since Chief '97(v6)-X4