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tunnel vault การใช้

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  • Those longer tunnel vaults are encased in the same bedrock granite.
  • The high ceiling above the auditorium takes the form of a coffered segmental tunnel vault.
  • It is a single-nave space with tunnel vaults ( in a pattern of stars, hearts and rosettes ).
  • The kiln, which is exceptionally well preserved, measures around and has two tunnel vaults entered through 14 round-headed arches.
  • To circumvent the problem area, a tunnel vault was created in open cut form, and then covered with earth.
  • The abutments at either end of the bridge houses a group of six tunnel vaults with pointed arches and stone quoins.
  • The chancel was rebuilt in 1743 by Nathaniel Ireson for Sir Charles Berkeley as a shallow tunnel vault with Rococo styling, another unexpected note.
  • The idea for commercial storage came from the Mormon church, which opened its six tunnel vaults in 1964, four years earlier than Perpetual Storage.
  • As part of the reworking, the Sidney Chapel received an elegant pointed tunnel vault, panelled and painted, and with carved bosses on the ribs.
  • The simplest kind of vault is the barrel vault ( also called a wagon or tunnel vault ) which is generally semicircular in shape.
  • The chancel arch and the south porch, with its rare Norman tunnel vault, are late 11th century, and the north aisle arcade is from the late 12th century.
  • The hammer-beams themselves gave him a springing for short, low pitched tunnel vaults, running north and south, to connect the wall above the window heads with the rest of his vaulting.
  • If he had run his tunnel vault through at one level, the crown of it would have run out high above the head of the windows, and necessitated a gable over each window.
  • The design is almost identical with that of the stone vault over the Choir of the Cathedral, the great stone bracket pieces there taking the place of the hammer-beam supports, while the tunnel vaults run through at one level.
  • A "'barrel vault "', also known as a "'tunnel vault "'or a "'wagon vault "', is an architectural element formed by the extrusion of a single curve ( or pair of curves, in the case of a pointed barrel vault ) along a given distance.
  • The earliest known example of a vault is a tunnel vault found under the Sumerian ziggurat at Nippur in Babylonia, ascribed to about 4000 BC, which was built of burnt bricks amalgamated with clay sewers, though several buildings of the great Late Egyptian mortuary palace-temple of Ramesseum were also vaulted in this way.