ChatterBank0 min ago
lighthouses are always round
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Why are lighthouses round? what is the structural advantage to building a lighthouse round and not rectangular, as other buildings seem to be. (ps hello all the other regulars sorry i have not been around for a month but a) i quit my job b) i am enjoying myself too much to be on ABank - there is a place you can talk to me if you wish, i forget the URL, Indiesinger what is it again??? :-)
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No best answer has yet been selected by darth vader. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Maybe because they put them on a small piece of rock it's better because not so much surface area is required to build one. Plus once sailors got used to looking for that shape building it would look odd, and a tall tower is a distinctive shape to spot in bad weather. Actually that bit was a pretty stupid thing to say - I expect the big shiny light is the first thing they look for!
Ooh *scratches head* I think the link you're after is http://uk.groups.yahoo.com/group/Answerbook. Good to have you back, darth :)
Oh and... um... "lighthouses"... or something. (Need to keep the post on-topic...)
Oh and... um... "lighthouses"... or something. (Need to keep the post on-topic...)
hmmmm. well spotted secretspirit i would imagine the big shiny light thing would give it away :-) Don't think round is a very efficient shape for minimising surface area but there you go. Perhaps the areodynamics come into it (rekstout) but i think there is more to it than that - easier to build? easier to maintain? will hold out for other answers.
For a given perimeter, a circle has a greater area than any rectangle.
Partly the possible shape will be determined by location. A lighthouse atop a cliff could have a square tower, but one set on a rock (Bell Rock, Eddystone, Skerryvore, etc) has to be designed in a way to minimise the effects of wind and waves on its structure.
Defining the curve from base to top for such a lighthouse is yet another complication. On land, the tower can be cylindrical, or the frustrum of a cone.
I got interrupted and posted that without completing the last point.
Defining the curve from base to top for such a lighthouse is yet another complication. On land, the tower can be cylindrical, or the frustrum of a cone. At sea, the tower has to be curved, so as to dissipate the force of the waves.
I can highly recommend "The Lighthouse Stevensons" by Bella Bathurst. It tells the story of the building of Scottish lighthouses by the ancestors of Robert Louis Stevenson.
The lighthouse (pharos) at Alexandria, one of the seven wonders of the world, was square if you believe the depiction on:-http://ce.eng.usf.edu/pharos/wonders/list.html
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