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INTRODUCTION
I am a dome designer/builder living in Auckland,
New Zealand, where I was born, raised and educated. I am 48 years old and
have worked as an engineer for the last 25 years.
Apart from domes, I am interested in timber/plywood
structure, computers, reading, trout fishing, astronomy, the environment
and rugby union.I have written two books, "Plywood
in New Zealand" & "Timber
Geodesic Domes".
My business is to design domes for clients, and
then either build the dome for the client or organise it's construction
by others. To this end I provide plans, engineering calculations, complete
pre-cut, pre-nail, pre-fabrication details, setout geometry as well as
erection supervision and the supply of the hubs for the dome (this is the
part of my system which I keep to myself). I have now done 68 domes in
New Zealand and more recently Australia. I use ellipsoids and super-ellipsoids
for residential domes as well as commercial. I also use fragments of domes.
I have also built a theatre using a free form amorphous flow of geodesic
structure.
Personally
I like the quadrant symmetry of a super-ellipsoid (or super-spheroid) especially
the 4v. My philosophy is about draping a suitable geodesic over the spaces,
shapes and forms required by the client - I make the dome fit, modifying
the geometry to suit, and while it may add to the variations of panels
and hubs, I have never found the variety as much of a constraint as the
fitting what the client wants into a spheroid. I also save considerable
surface area by squashing the dome, and gain more useable space on mezzanine
floors by using a super-elliptical profile. I sometimes do a spheroid but
end up inevitably modifying the geometry to avoid riser walls and to create
even truncation planes.
BACKGROUND
My initial interest in domes was from the "N.Z.Whole
Earth Catalogue" and "Domebook 2" in the early seventies. I subsequently
made many models; spheres, eggs, ellipsoids etc. based on icosahedra, tetrahedra,
octahedra and dodecahedra.
For two years I planned building my own home
as a dome and to this end I built two four meter diameter domes, one by
the hub and strut method (as shown below in the photo of the 2v oblate
super-ellipsoidal icosahedron built for the N.Z.Forestry Corporation) and
the other by the triangle method (see this method in the photo below of
the dome test) - the two methods described in "Domebook 2".
I
favoured the latter technique as it allowed fixing of the plywood outer
skin prior to erection, when it came to building part of my home as a dome.
I subsequently built an 8m diameter 5/8 spheroid icosahedron as the main
living area of my home, using triangles framed with 75x50 timber and skinned
with 15mm plywood, each triangle bolted to its adjacent triangles through
the 75x50 framing, which was bevelled at 7o
to allow for the dihedral angle.
At the time, 1975, a computer analysis
of the structure would have cost $5,000 and would have been done in Melbourne,
Australia. To get around this high cost, I convinced the local building
permit authority to allow me to proof test load the structure. I hung 2
x 25kg bags of Dricon from each node point and measured the downward deflection
of the zenith using a dial gauge from my research lab. This load was the
design liveload requirement of NZS4203.
I
was running at the time a Research and Development Laboratory for N.Z.'s
largest plywood manufacturer, testing structure for the company as well
as outside clients. In my R&D work over an eight year period I had
tested many different wall systems (racking tests), floor systems, and
roof systems mainly incorporating timber and plywood. I also developed
plywood treatment systems, using LOSP treatment, tested paint systems for
plywood & introduced plywood wall claddings to the N.Z. market. (A
careful look at the picture shows that I am using plywood wall cladding
inside out as my sarking - downgraded 15mm Shadowclad when I only needed
9mm plywood.)
Under design liveload, 0.25kPa UDL, the 8m diameter
dome deflected 1.7mm at the zenith, which was accepted as satisfactory
by the local authority. In the structural testing I had done, I had often
seen 10mm deflections of floors, walls, beams and roofs which were well
within safe limits. 1.7mm was negligible, and much of that deflection was
the closing of minor gaps under load.
By 1980 I had been responsible for over 400 uses
of plywood/timber structure developed from the R&D work including 17m
span plywood folded plate roofs, 30m span plywood boxbeam portal frames,
24m span plyweb beams, 8m span plywood stressed skin panel floor systems,
as well as some specialised uses with fibreglass. I had become the spokesperson
for the Plywood Association of N.Z. and was giving many lectures at seminars,
conferences, Universities and at Technical Institutes.
About this time I got a copy of Hugh Kenner's
book, "Geodesic Math and How to Use It".
Professor Kenner's following statement hit
me in the eye.
"It
would help, moreover, if geodesic design could be disentangled from its
historical reliance on spheres. More than once a geodesic approach has
been shunned because the designer, for one good reason or for several,
didn't want his structure to resemble a slice from a sphere. But anyone
who masters the design procedure in this book will find that, once he has
mastered geodesic spheres, geodesic eggs, whether tall or flat, are only
one step more complicated, and free-form contours are no more difficult
than eggs." Hugh
Kenner
I was inspired by this statement and since then
have built eggs, squashed domes, super-ellipsoids, fragmented domes and
some free form amorphous flows.
In 1980 I was asked to design a 24m diameter
dome. I had met Dr.John Butterworth, senior lecturer in Civil Engineering
at Auckland University School of Engineering, who had done his Ph.D. thesis
on the "Buckling of Geodesics" under Makowski at Surrey and whom was able
to perform a linear analysis, using the direct stiffness method, of the
24m dome.
From
my experience of fixing the internal lining in situ on my own dome, I was
determined to come up with a method to avoid this labour intensive and
physically difficult task. I also had the perception that spherical domes
were limited in their application and that ellipsoidal domes were more
useful. However, with ellipsoids, there is a considerable variation of
the dihedral angle. From back grounding myself for a lecture series I gave
on the design of concrete form work I had noticed an old form work technique
of using wedges. Thus the method, which I have used for domes since, evolved
for the 3 frequency 3/8 ellipsoidal (x2+y2+0.618z2=1)
icosahedron used for the 24m diameter dome.
The dome was erected by forming hex and pent
clusters, craned into place, propped from the ground, wedged and nail-plated
after erection. This dome was fibreglassed for weatherproofing, which took
place six weeks after I had been asked to design the dome. The council
was extremely co-operative in granting a building permit - it took only
five days. We used the project as a work experience for eight Auckland
University School of Architecture students over their summer holidays.
A Building Permit
In preparing the documentation for a building permit,
we analysed the following load cases:
Live load = 0.25kPa
Dead load = 0.25kPa
Wind load @ 35m/s as per NZS4203:1976
A = LL + DL
A = LL + DL + W
A = 0.7DL + W
The wind load took into account a complex External
Pressure Coefficient (Cpe) system, which we have since simplified to a
zone of +0.4 on the windward side and a zone of -0.9 on the top and leeward
side.
From the linear analysis I had axial loads and
deflections as results. I took combined axial and bending, using the tributary
area to each strut, taken as adjacent triangle boundary members, and calculated
moments and shears and checked deflections. I also checked the deflection
of all framing members under a 1kN point load, a requirement of NZS4203
"Code of Practice for General Structural Design and Design Loadings for
Buildings".
The 1kN point load on the longest internal framing
member has turned out to be the governing criteria in every dome built
by this method except in one dome built on a cliff top in Wellington, N.Z.,
where the 50year return period wind speed was 45m/s, which was factored
by 2.4 to allow for the height from the bottom of the cliff and for the
funnelling effect of a nearby gorge (again in accordance with NZS4203)
MY DOME DESIGN BUSINESS
The response to the 24m dome was so many prospective
jobs that I started my own business designing, and in some cases building
domes. I have now designed 68 domes which have been built.
The significant ones I list below;
-
two dome fragments from a 3 frequency(3v) 13m diameter squashed ellipsoidal
icosahedron separated by a clerestory
- 10m x 8m 4v superellipsoidal icosahedron which
was made from a single skin of 21mm plywood only, with 21mm plywood hubs,
84 triangle variations, 53 hub variations erected in 6 hours using a single
point lift overhead and wires to the top three courses of triangles.
- 17m diameter 3v egg cut longitudinally, elliptical
plan, fragment missing, plus free form amorphous flow onto adjacent flat
roof.
- a dome/home, built at North Avoca, New South
Wales, Australia. The owner moved in January 1997. It was based on
a 12m diameter 3v superspheroidal icosahedron, fragmented to give a clerestory,
which with ground floor, mezzanine and basement had 170m2 of floor area,
4 bedrooms, 2 living rooms, 3 bathrooms etc.
- 24m diameter 3v squashed ellipsoidal icosahedron.
- 1200m2 free form amorphous flow geodesic with
one end supported on a 30m x 20m squashed ellipsoid.
-
15.6m diameter 4v 3/4 sphere built inside a 18m 4v 3/4 sphere, built by
hanging the cap of the inner dome from a crane hook, strutting the outer
dome from the inner dome and then both domes erected together by adding
to the bottom of each dome as we lifted. This took a crew of 14 men 11
hours to erect the 480 panels involved.
- 11m diameter 4v superspheroid (in Australia)
erected in 7 hours using the overhead technique.
- 18m x 11m 2v superellipsoid as a hub and strut
frame supporting a fabric skin.
-
48m x 36m diameter 3v stretched, squashed, superellipsoid, pre-lined with
timber matched lining, 2/150x50 framing, 12mm plywood skin, erected by
the cluster technique in 19 hours of crane time, including 8 hours during
which we waited for 20 knot winds to subside
- many variations on a theme using different points
as the zenith, different stretch and squash ratios, different truncation
planes and different fragments missing for openings or projections.
THE FUTURE - DREAMS AND SCHEMES
SKYBREAK
What I am going to build for myself next is a
1000sq.m "skybreak", based on a 6v superellipsoidal icosahedron
(50mx20mx10m high), mostly glass, using shrubs, hedges, hanging vines
etc to create different living spaces including indoor flower, herb and
vegetable gardens, and using the spaces under a mezzanine to create the
private spaces required in a home. It will have passive solar heating,
solar water heating, perhaps an indoor pool, interior landscaping. I'll
have started building within the next 18 months.
AN INDOOR STADIUM
I remain serious about designing and building
a large timber geodesic dome over an indoor stadium.
CITY IN THE CLOUDS
I've had a long term interest in super-large
air/thermal ships as per Bucky's ideas. Is there anyone out there seriously
interested in this or actually working on this type of thing. Not only
could "cities" be possible with existing technology, but also super-size
transporters (say1km in diameter).
Consider these two thoughts
1. Star Wars' City in the Clouds, where Luke
Skywalker lost his hand, (interesting that Lucius Scaevola -Roman/Carthage
history- lost his hand also) is what I am talking about
2. the alien ships that burnt the cities in ID4
would not have had a problem at that size (15 miles in diameter) in keeping
up in the air, but instead would have had trouble keeping near the ground
-they would float in the atmosphere.
COVERED CITIES
The environment is suffering from the increasing
complexity of human endeavour (progress?) on this planet. Already we face
acid rain, unbreathable air and serious cancer (melanoma) risk from exposure
to high UV because of the depletion of ozone in the upper atmosphere. We
suffer high energy costs to keep major cities warm e.g. Manhattan is like
the cylinder head of a motor bike, ideal for cooling. The surface area
of a dome to cover Manhattan would be insignificant compared with the surface
area of all the buildings and roadways. Heat loss takes place through surfaces.
A dome would keep a city warm, UV protected, pollution free and contribute
significantly to energy savings (and thus fossil fuel conservation). Such
domes are not only possible with existing technology but are fast becoming
highly desirable and even necessary.
SPACE
The geodesic dome will have its part to play
in the exploration and development of space, especially as we start to
live on other worlds. The moon is an obvious starting point. I hope to
be around as this chapter in human history unfolds.
My interests
(other
than geodesics)
Man
cannot live by geodesics alone - thus my other interests & recreations.
My family is my major interest and my major time
commitment. I have 7 children including 3 stepsons. 6 of them and my mother
are celebrating two events at this dinner - my 45th birthday and N.Z. winning
the Americas Cup yachting that same day.
Clockwise around the table are Jonathan (who
died of cancer 14 August 1998 aged 25), Daniel, my mother Joy, Oliver (who's
called Odge), Amanda, Ben, Emma and myself. Christopher (called Toff) is
missing - he's living in Australia.
Amanda is my oldest child and so far the only
parent amongst my children. Her son, my grandson Sean is now seven.
Jonathan
had an extremely nasty version of cancer called Ewings Sarcoma. He was
in northern Italy touring in a camper-van in April 1986, when the Chernobyl
cloud swung down through Italy and Greece. Ewings is the type of sarcoma
which affects young people and is normally in the bone - he had it in the
soft tissue. It's my bet that it was caused by Chernobyl, which strengthens
my anti-nuclear resolve. Jonathan's courage and good cheer right to the
end was humbling - could I ever be that brave? When he was born in Dunedin
in 1973, I was the first Dad allowed to be present at a birth in the Dunedin
maternity hospital. While common now, in those days, it was just not done.
I held him when he was born, I held him when
he died. Children should bury their parents!
RUGBY UNION
In NZ we are mad about Rugby Union. Our national
team is the All Blacks and I am a keen fan. One day I'll follow them on
tour to South Africa when they play the mighty Springboks. Thank God that
apartheid has ended, for during those troubled years when we boycotted
South Africa, we missed out on some great rugby, though the boycott had
my support. As a former player, when my boys came of age to play (i.e.
5yrs old) I became a rugby coach. This I have done for 16 years.In 1993,
I was appointed coach of a North Harbour rep team for the Roller Mills
Tournament, one of the oldest rugby tournaments in the world - and that
year, won the Roller Mills shield for North Harbour (or it's predecessor,
Auckland North) for the first time in 44years. My fellow coach/selectors,
Graham Hayhow and Warrick Black are with me in the photo. My rugby union
newsgroup is rec.sport.rugby.union.
TROUT FISHING
I will always be grateful to my late father,
Jim Rich, for teaching me to fly-fish in the Waitahanui River at Lake Taupo.
My children now fish. I tie my own flies and go fishing a dozen times a
year, including a couple of whole weeks at Taupo.The pics are of Emma,
a 7lb brown jack, a 4lb rainbow hen, an 8lb rainbow jack and me. The 8
pounder is not the largest trout I've caught, but is probably the best
conditioned large fish I've taken. I caught it on a Red-tipped Governor
nymph in a pool called Blackfish. For some reason, fish in that pool are
"black" as evidenced by the photo.
I occasionally contribute to a newsgroup called
rec.outdoors.fishing.fly, known as ROFF for short.
"A bad day fishing is still better than a good
day working".
ASTRONOMY

I have always kept a watch on the sky, ever since
I saw Sputnik in 1957. I watched the Apollo 11 moon landing on TV for days,
all the flypasts of the outer planets and have become an amateur observer.
From the age of ten, I would get up at 4am and climb a nearby hill, Maungakiekie
(One Tree Hill) to watch comets rising before the dawn. We had a total
eclipse in 1965, my life revolved around the 1969 Apollo news and I saw
Halley's comet in 1986. My kids and I watched the fragments of Shoemaker-Levy
9 crashing into Jupiter through the telescope at the Auckland Observatory
two nights running and last year I watched Hale-Bopp (though in the southern
hemisphere we only saw it after perihelion). I regularly look for and see
Mercury, I looked for the Leonid meteor storm which was a flop here in
NZ, I watched the recent close Venus/Jupiter alignment and I always know
where the moon is. I am drawn to Pleiades for it's beauty ( and it's in
my sign of Taurus) and Apha Centauri, one of the pointers of the Southern
Cross, because it's closest to us and this fires my imagination. I have
seen the Aurora Borealis from Invercargill and Dunedin, sometimes quite
spectacular. I have three times seen a moon-bow, and I don't mean the ring
around the moon, I mean a rainbow caused by the moon.
I follow sci.astro and sci.astro.amateur as newsgroups
on the net.
Can you imagine my joy to be fishing the Waitahanui
River mouth at night, away from the city lights and 1,000 ft above sea-level,
watching the stars?
A lone trout fisherman at the
"Picket Fence", the mouth of the Waitahanui River, at dusk.
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