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Designing a Buckyball Home

Frequency 3

You have the option of designing your house as a class I, icosahedron, frequency 3, buckyball dome. The dome in this example is:

Compare this to a frequency 6 buckyball dome.

bbc1i03.png

Full Sphere: bbc1i03.png

A 5/8 dome in this picture is truncated just below the equator. The two hexagons next to the pentagon are not truncated. The hexagon under the pentagon is truncated in half to be level with the ground.

Here are two views of the buckyball dome after it has been truncated below the equator.

bbhalf.png

First view: bbhalf.png

bbhalf2.png

Second view: bbhalf2.png

The strlen statement to produce this dome has one additional parameter, -b.

      strlen -c1 -pi -f3 -d 12.0 -b

The end of the summary report looks like this: this.


Class I Icosahedron  Frequency 3  Radius 6.000000  Diameter 12.000000
Buckyball

Minimum length 2.421289
Maximum length 2.421289   1.000000 times longer
Average length 2.421289   Stdev nan
Struts per face        6
Total  faces          20
Struts per sphere    120
Length count   1

    Strut List
    Count   Length
        6   2.421289


Notice that there is only one strut length in this dome. Usually when you build a buckyball dome, each pentagon or hexagon is pre-fabricated as a reinforced flat surface. The strut in the summary report is just the edge of the pentagon or hexagon.

Because the surface area of each pentagon and hexagon is rather large, reinforcing the surface prevents it from buckling under stress and helps it to pass local building codes. The whole dome is rather sturdy under stress and is easy to mass produce.

No hub is necessary in a buckyball dome. Once the faces are clamped together and sealed, the structure remains stable and sturdy.

Usually a buckyball dome is enhanced with dormers and a cupola at the top, where you can sit and enjoy cool breezes on a hot summer night.