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In the critically acclaimed first edition of this book, Mainstone offered a brilliant and highly original account of the structural developments that have made possible the achievements of architects and bridge builders throughout history. In this extensively revised and expanded new edition, now
available in paperback, new insights and a full coverage of recent
developments in both design and construction are incorporated. The
book identifies features that distinguish the forms built by man
from those shaped by nature and discusses the physical and other
constraints on the choices that can be made. It then looks in turn
at all the elementary forms - arches, domes, beams, slabs and the
like - which combine into the more complex forms of complete
structures, and at the different classes of the complete forms
themselves. The development of each form is traced chronologically,
but with an emphasis less on the chronology than on the problems
that designers have continually faced in trying to serve new ends
with limited means or to serve old ones in new ways. The book
concludes with a chapter on the processes of design, showing how
the designer's freedom of choice has been widened by a growing
understanding of structural behaviour.
In the critically acclaimed first edition of this book, Mainstone offered a brilliant and highly original account of the structural developments that have made possible the achievements of architects and bridge builders throughout history. In this extensively revised and expanded new edition, now available in paperback, new insights and a full coverage of recent developments in both design and construction are incorporated. The book identifies features that distinguish the forms built by man from those shaped by nature and discusses the physical and other constraints on the choices that can be made. It then looks in turn at all the elementary forms - arches, domes, beams, slabs and the like - which combine into the more complex forms of complete structures, and at the different classes of the complete forms themselves. The development of each form is traced chronologically, but with an emphasis less on the chronology than on the problems that designers have continually faced in trying to serve new ends with limited means or to serve old ones in new ways. The book concludes with a chapter on the processes of design, showing how the designer's freedom of choice has been widened by a growing understanding of structural behaviour.
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