View allAll Photos Tagged HyperbolicParaboloid

Hyparschale Ausstellungszentrum Kulturpark Rotehorn Magdeburg, Sachsen-Anhalt, Deutschland _ 17.10.2008

 

More images by me of this location you can find under: www.lumabytes.com/hyparschale-ausstellungszentrum-kulturp...

Which may or may not exist. From a regular sine squircle with a hole in the middle.

 

Needs thicker paper.

This is the United Church of Christ in Midland, Michigan designed by Robert Schwartz and Charles Blacklock The roof over the sanctuary is a hyperbolic paraboloid supported by two buttresses, which spans 148 feet from point to point and the buttresses are 80 feet apart. The roof contains 157 tons of concrete reinforced with 23 tons of steel. It was done in one continuous pour, with trucks coming from all over the area all day. Larry and I visited this today along with several other churches by famous architects in the Midland, Michigan area. This one is the most dramatic from the outside.

Candelaria Metro Station, Mexico City

Félix Candela, 1967

The Market is part of The Huddersfield Blueprint and will form part of the Cultural Heart of that plan.

This shot from Alfred St, shows the Market shut down, the perimeter of the site secured and partial demolition ongoing. This has revealed the hyperbolic paraboloid structures, seen here in this shot.

More Information here: www.kirklees.gov.uk/beta/huddersfield-blueprint/pdf/hudde...

Here also is a short video from Kirklees Council showing a fly through The Cultural Heart: www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANGWW2qj-9E

Fab-Union Space, Shanghai

Archi-Union, 2015

St. Charles Borromeo Church was designed by Funk, Molander, and Johnson and was completed in 1961. The church is constructed in the shape of an unbalanced hyperbolic-paraboloid. The baked enamel doors and the stained glass throughout the church were designed by French artist, Gabriel Loire.

At a rest stop on 80 between Sacramento and San Francisco.

1963, Sam Scorer architect, Hajnal Konyi engineer, stained glass by Keith New.

"A modern church for a modern housing estate".

1963, Sam Scorer architect, Hajnal Konyi engineer

"A modern church for a modern housing estate".

1963, Sam Scorer architect, Hajnal Konyi engineer

"A modern church for a modern housing estate".

The Market is part of The Huddersfield Blueprint and will form part of the Cultural Heart of that plan.

This shot from Alfred St, shows the Market shut down, the perimeter of the site secured and partial demolition ongoing. This has revealed the hyperbolic paraboloid structures, with their glazing still intact seen here in this shot.

More Information here: www.kirklees.gov.uk/beta/huddersfield-blueprint/pdf/hudde...

Here also is a short video from Kirklees Council showing a fly through The Cultural Heart: www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANGWW2qj-9E

St. Charles Borromeo Church was designed by Funk, Molander, and Johnson and was completed in 1961. The church is constructed in the shape of an unbalanced hyperbolic-paraboloid. The baked enamel doors and the stained glass throughout the church were designed by French artist, Gabriel Loire.

Fab-Union Space, Shanghai

Archi-Union, 2015

1963, Sam Scorer architect, Hajnal Konyi engineer

"A modern church for a modern housing estate".

Candelaria Metro Station, Mexico City

Félix Candela, 1967

Fab-Union Space, Shanghai

Archi-Union, 2015

A hyperbolic paraboloid is a non-developable ruled surface generated by the motion of a straight line always touching two straight skew lines and always parallel to a plane surface. The hyperbolic paraboloid is in fact a doubly ruled surface.

 

The square pleated model is a good representation of a hyperbolic paraboloid. I have drawn in the white line to illustrate.

St. Charles Borromeo Church was designed by Funk, Molander, and Johnson and was completed in 1961. The church is constructed in the shape of an unbalanced hyperbolic-paraboloid. The baked enamel doors and the stained glass throughout the church were designed by French artist, Gabriel Loire.

1963, Sam Scorer architect, Hajnal Konyi engineer

"A modern church for a modern housing estate".

Felix Candela's entrance to the Oceanogràfic, Europe's largest aquarium, in Valencia, Spain

To cleanse our palates, here's... a good building. Maybe not a great one, but at least living up to its remit. Hyperbolic paraboloid roof, concrete structure, copper roof and a soaring profile only partly undone by the chunky, stout volume of space captured underneath. But whatever - at least it's got a little zip to it. The pointy-pointy parti may also be an attempt to contrast with the neighboring Macy's building (the gray presence looming in the background), a big circle by SOM. (Photos of that one coming soon.)

This church, consecrated Saint Mary of the Assumption, is affectionately known in San Francisco as Saint Mary Maytag, or Our Lady of the Maytag since the inverted hyperbolic paraboloids resemble a giant washing machine agitator. I like saying "hyperbolic paraboloid"

 

It's a treat. I like the contrasting shapes if you squint at the picture. Nervi and Belluschi killed this one.

 

And i just found out may have inadvertently given a peep show to Western San Francisco: Thanks guys!

 

Shadow and Light

Same as the last, minus some cruft. Of course, it is extremely wicked, heathenish to fold from concave polygons, but it being a holiday and all....

Candelaria Metro Station, Mexico City

Félix Candela, 1967

1963, Sam Scorer architect, Hajnal Konyi engineer, stained glass by Keith New.

"A modern church for a modern housing estate".

The old Commonwealth Institute in Kensington, London. Seen here stripped and ready to be converted into the new Design Museum. The building is by Robert Matthew Johnson Marshall (RMJM), built 1960-62. It is now Grade II* listed, mainly for its complex hyperbolic paraboloid roof

The old Commonwealth Institute in Kensington, London. Seen here stripped and ready to be converted into the new Design Museum. The building is by Robert Matthew Johnson Marshall (RMJM), built 1960-62. It is now Grade II* listed, mainly for its complex hyperbolic paraboloid roof

Sam Scorer architect, 1959-61, Brayford Pool, Lincoln.

 

The car showrooms were subsequently used as a library and later restaurants (in 2011 it was Nandos restaurant).

The old Commonwealth Institute in Kensington, London. Seen here stripped and ready to be converted into the new Design Museum. The building is by Robert Matthew Johnson Marshall (RMJM), built 1960-62. It is now Grade II* listed, mainly for its complex hyperbolic paraboloid roof

Tutorial 5 Folding Example Hyperbolic Paraboloid

www.youtube.com/watch?v=L9E8uovbyVo

 

Parallel Pleat Forms Hyperbolic Paraboloid

www.youtube.com/watch?v=kYstleabCA4

 

Hyperbolic-Paraboloid Surface Structure

www.youtube.com/watch?v=pkfBMlVb5vo

 

Hyperbolic-Paraboloid Doubly-Ruled Surface Structure

www.youtube.com/watch?v=d9sLcGiZNqE

1963, Sam Scorer architect, Hajnal Konyi engineer

"A modern church for a modern housing estate".

Green Laser light. Herning, Denmark. December 2010.

St. Charles Borromeo Church was designed by Funk, Molander, and Johnson and was completed in 1961. The church is constructed in the shape of an unbalanced hyperbolic-paraboloid. The baked enamel doors and the stained glass throughout the church were designed by French artist, Gabriel Loire.

The old Commonwealth Institute in Kensington, London. Seen here stripped and ready to be converted into the new Design Museum. The building is by Robert Matthew Johnson Marshall (RMJM), built 1960-62. It is now Grade II* listed, mainly for its complex hyperbolic paraboloid roof

The old Commonwealth Institute in Kensington, London. Seen here stripped and ready to be converted into the new Design Museum. The building is by Robert Matthew Johnson Marshall (RMJM), built 1960-62. It is now Grade II* listed, mainly for its complex hyperbolic paraboloid roof

The old Commonwealth Institute in Kensington, London. Seen here stripped and ready to be converted into the new Design Museum. The building is by Robert Matthew Johnson Marshall (RMJM), built 1960-62. It is now Grade II* listed, mainly for its complex hyperbolic paraboloid roof

The old Commonwealth Institute in Kensington, London. Seen here stripped and ready to be converted into the new Design Museum. The building is by Robert Matthew Johnson Marshall (RMJM), built 1960-62. It is now Grade II* listed, mainly for its complex hyperbolic paraboloid roof

C438_30

06/10/2009 : Palm Springs, CA, N. Palm Canyon Dr: Tramway Gas Station / Palm Springs Visitor Center (Albert Frey & Robson C. Chambers, 1965)

The old Commonwealth Institute in Kensington, London. Seen here stripped and ready to be converted into the new Design Museum. The building is by Robert Matthew Johnson Marshall (RMJM), built 1960-62. It is now Grade II* listed, mainly for its complex hyperbolic paraboloid roof

Trying to create more organic (curvy and less reliant on a dodecahedral base) forms. Got a new batch of magnets today. Im not a fan of the gold ones but I do like having three different colors. Helps to differentiate the form. Tends to get lost if you use nothing but silver.

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