Perfecting Steve Baer's Triple Dome

https://news.ycombinator.com/rss Hits: 5
Summary

In the mid-1960s, Steve Baer was involved with Drop City, an artist's community outside of Trinidad, Colorado. Baer was very interested in dome structures, but was frustrated with some of the features of geodesic domes popularized by Buckminster Fuller. Baer wanted something more adaptable, extensible, and modular, so he explored the geometry of zonohedra, polyhedra with rings of parallel edges. Through his studies, Baer became intimately familiar with the Platonic and Archimedean solids. At Drop City, Baer and others built a variety of dome buildings "on the cheap", salvaging car tops for the panels in the domes. The most iconic of these was Baer's triple dome, constructed with parts of three rhombicosidodecahedra fused together. For brevity, I'll use "RID" instead of "rhombicosidodecahedron" (or "RIDs" plural) in the rest of this article. Most of the figures in this article are interactive 3D views. Use your mouse or touch to rotate, pan, and zoom. To construct his triple dome, Baer had to overcome a slight problem: when he tried to fit the three RIDs around a point, they didn't connect. The construction requires chopping off two caps from each polyhedron, exposing partial decagon faces. The problem is that the angle between those faces is not 2饾湅/3, required if they are to all meet around a point. You can try to build three such modules in Zometool, but they won't join up with normal Zome balls -- you would need two kinds of special connectors at the boundary, and you're still left with an angular gap. Baer had to "fudge" it, using force to close the slight gap the third joint. Baer's son Jos茅 recently shared with me an unpublished essay by Steve Baer himself, in which he describes this gap and the dismay that it caused him: I was so enthralled by these forms, I assumed they were merely clumsy bubbles. Only later did I realize that these polyhedral bubbles did not fit. The fusing angles were not a perfect 120掳 as with the soap bubbles, but irrational angles of 116...

First seen: 2025-12-21 02:30

Last seen: 2025-12-21 06:31