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Palladio's wooden bridges

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 August 2008

Jacques Heyman
Affiliation:
3 Banhams CloseCambridge CB41HXUK

Abstract

In Book 3 of his Four Books on Architecture (1579), Palladio gives alternative designs for a wooden trussed bridge to span a river 100ft wide. The designs are ingenious, and analysis of Palladio's proposals shows that the bridges would have been effective. Some of the details, however, seem to be at variance with the expected structural action of the bridges, and there remain problems (not fully answered here) of practical construction.

Type
Structure
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2000

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References

Palladio, A. (1570). I Quattro Libri dell' Architettura, Venice. Many subsequent editions and translations, among which: Ware, Isaac, The Four Books of Andrea Palladio's Architecture, London, 1738, republished in 1965 by Dover Publications Inc., New York.Google Scholar
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Rondelet, J. (1834). Traité théorique et pratique de l'art de bâtir, 7th edition (5 volumes plus plates), Paris.Google Scholar
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Heyman, J. (1998) Structural Analysis: a Historical Approach, Cambridge University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Galilei, Galileo (undated). Discorsie Dimostrazione Matematiche, intorno £ i Movimenti Locali, Elsevier, Leyden. Many translations, among which: Drake, S., Two New Sciences, University of Wisconsin Press, 1974.Google Scholar