Monday, March 4, 2013

Welcome

Welcome to the Architectural Scavenger Hunt Blog! First off we are “The Hail Mar-ies” and we found this project interesting and challenging all in all. We liked the whole idea of being able to find out more about Columbus’s architectural connections, as well as getting to know what and why they are special. Our group will now explain and define the architectural pieces we have discovered during this mission. 

-Mari

-Mary

-Srinivas

-Haley



And I'd like to apologize how confusing this blog will be. I tried my best to keep it as organized as possible...but that attempt was a failure. I honestly don't know how you will grade this...(but please grade it.) But I tried to organize the posts by location. But if there are additional examples I will add little photos next to it that are other locations but have the same features. ENJOY!

Miss Powell is best teacher in the world! (Yes, I'm trying to butter you up, but you really are the best teacher.)

Sunday, March 3, 2013

Last Minute Post....

Let's be honest Miss Powell...all kids have last minute moments on projects...so these are some things we forgot..and now are adding on.

More Chatahoochee!
Location: Chatahoochee River

Location: Riverwalk

Location: Public Library on Macon
 
                                          
Location: Some abandoned building on First Ave.

                - Transverse Vault
Location: Holy Family Catholic Church
 
  • barrel vault (bar-uh l vawlt) A masonry roof or ceiling constructed on the arch principle, or a concrete roof of the same shape. A barrel or tunnel) vault, semicylindrical in cross-section, is in effect a deep arch or uninterrupted series of arches, one behind the other over an oblong space.
  • cross vault (krôs vawlt) A groin (or cross) vault is formed at the point at which two barrel vaults intersect at right angles.
  • Rotunda(roh-tuhn-duh) A round building or room, esp. one with a dome
  • rustication ([ruhs-ti-key-shuh n)To give a rustic appearance by roughening the surfaces and beveling the edges of stone blocks to  emphasize the joints between them. Rustication is a technique employed in ancient Roman architecture, and was also popular during the Renaissance, especially for stone courses at the ground-floor level
  • transverse barrel vault  (trans-vurs bar-uh l vawlt)   In medieval architecture, a semicylindrical vault oriented at a 90-degree angle to the nave of a church.
 

 
 
 
 

Chatahooche Bridge on 14th Street

Taken on March 3.
Wow. The Chatahoochee looks really clean.
 


spandrel(span-druh l) The roughly triangular space enclosed by the curves of adjacent arches and a horizontal member connecting their vertexes; also, the space enclosed by the curve of an arch and an enclosing right angle. The area between the arch proper and the framing columns and entablature.

Pretty Proscenium- Springer Opera House

I just love the Springer Opera House! And this deserved its own post....anyways sorry for the no label. But if you see the square thing around the stage, that is the proscenium!
Proscenium (proh-see-nee-uh m) The stage of an ancient theater.


Downtown buildings that didn't get their own post...

Woah. This is quite the mix of places. It might get cra'y.
Well this corbeled arch looks nothing like the Mycenaens...but I read this is one too. So.
Location: Columbus Travel
Taken on February 24th.

Doric must be Greek for lame.

With the Doric style comes an abacus, echinus, entablature, architrave...etc. (These things are labeled in an earlier picture) I felt like it was implied these counted as abacuses and echinuses and blah blah...it's just so much to label it ALL again.
Location: okay some place that is associated with First Baptist, I mean that's what the sign in front of this building said. I'm sorry! I couldn't find the address, it's across from the First Baptist parking, and near that environment building.
Taken on Feb 24th.




This project is making me go crazy.
Location: Post Office downtown
Taken on Feb 24th.


 More engaged columns on 2400 Second Ave!

Okay this is definitely going out on tangent since I'm ADHD, but I would so live in 2400 Second Ave. if it wasn't located in such a questionable area.











Again, I love this building...this also features fenestration! (If you notce the placement of the windows.)
Location: Iron Bank Coffee building
Taken on March 3rd.

I just thought facade
was a fancy, pretty intricate
building.
Location: I DON'T KNOW. I can't find it.

This is really pretty!
Location: First Presbyterian












 This kind of look like something off Super Mario.
Location: First African Baptist Church
Taken on Feb 27th.





  • corbeled arch(kawr-buh ahrch ) A projecting wall member used as a support for some element in the superstructure. Also, courses of stone or brick in which each course projects beyond the one beneath it. Two such walls, meeting at the topmost course, create a corbeled arch or corbeled vault.
  • Armature (/ˈärməCHər/; ahr-muh-cher ) The crossed, or diagonal, arches that form the skeletal framework of a Gothic rib vault. In sculpture, the framework for a clay form.
  • dentil range
  • Doric capital (dawr-ik  kap-i-tl ) One of the two systems (or orders) invented in ancient Greece for articulating the three units of the elevation of a classical buildingthe platform, the colonnade, and the superstructure (entablature). The Doric order is characterized by, among other features, capitals with funnel-shaped echinuses, columns without bases, and a frieze of triglyphs and metopes.
  • engaged column (en-geyjd kol-uh m) half-round column attached to a wall.
  • volute
  • façade (fuh-sahd)Usually, the front of a building; also, the other sides when they are emphasized architecturally.
  • Parapet (par-uh-pit)A low, protective wall along the edge of a balcony, roof, or bastion.
  • fenestration(fen-uh-strey-shuh n)The arrangement of the windows of a building.

Corinthian Order

Taken on February 20th. #throwback
This is the coolelst building ever.
Location: Van Dyke's Barbershop right next to Iron Bank Coffee
Location: St. Joseph's Hall
okay. this doesn't look like St. Joseph's but that's what I have written down..so.
  
  • Corinthian capital (kuh-rin-thee-uh n kap-i-tl) A more ornate form than Doric or Ionic; it consists of a double row of acanthus leaves from which tendrils and flowers grow, wrapped around a bell-shaped echinus. Although this capital form is often cited as the distinguishing feature of the Corinthian order, there is, strictly speaking, no Corinthian order, but only this style of capital used in the Ionic order.
  • keystone
  • voussoir
  • colonnette (kol-uh-net) A vertical, weight-carrying architectural member, circular in cross-section and consisting of a base (sometimes omitted), a shaft, and a capital.
  • Pendentive(pen-den-tiv) A concave, triangular section of a hemisphere, four of which provide the transition from a square area to the circular base of a covering dome. Although pendentives appear to be hanging (pendant) from the dome, they in fact support it.





    I'm pretty sure I had two other Corinthian orders somewhere else. I honestly don't know...I am so sorry Miss Powell...

Post and Lintels

Taken February 27th.
Beautiful architecture...*cough*
Location: Ministry House- Food Closet of First Baptist Church

If there was a slacker in the architecural features, post and lintel system would be it.
Location: Chatahoochee River Club

A different look at a post and lintel.
Location: First Prebyterian Church



post and lintel system(pohst uh nd lin-tl sis-tuh m)A system of construction in which two posts support a lintel.


Holy Family Catholic Church

These were taken February 27th.
I thought these were eaves....

That tree ruined the picture! It's not even alive, it's dead!

That statuette scared me...I thought it was a person.





Ba da ba ba ba, I'm lovin' it.
Get it? Because it looks like McDonalds...
Sorry, I'm not funny, on to more colonnades.
Anyways, I don't know about this colonnade. (Okay, according to the definition this isn't really one, but I looked for pictures and it said this was a colonnade.)
I will pay somebody to tell me what this building is...I know it's near First Presbyterian. It was for sale or rent. But do you see that colonnade on that portico! (Nice!) 




It's an arch. With a point.

More pointed arches! with an archivolt! 
(For another archivolt look at First Baptist.)








  • Eaves (eevs) The part of a roof that meets or overhangs the walls of a building
  • lancet window(lan-sit  win-doh)In Gothic architecture, a tall narrow window ending in a pointed arch.
  • rib vault (rib vawlt)A vault in which the diagonal and transverse ribs compose a structural skeleton that partially supports the masonry web between them.
  • votive statuette
  • colonnade (ˌkäləˈnād)A series or row of columns, usually spanned by lintel.
  •  archivolt (/ˈärkəˌvōlt/; ahr-kuh-vohlt ) The continuous molding framing an arch. In Romanesque or Gothic architecture, one of the series of concentric bands framing the tympanum.
    • pointed arch (poin-tid ahrch)A narrow arch of pointed profile, in contrast to a semicircular arch.


National Infantry Museum

These were taken March 2!
[some cool caption]
Is this a fenestration? I mean those things are kind of like windows...

[even cooler caption]
 
     
  • Oculus([ok-yuh-luh s) Latin,“eye.” The round central opening of a dome. Also, a small round window in a Gothic cathedral.
  •  
  • fenestration(fen-uh-strey-shuh n)The arrangement of the windows of a building.
  • terracotta (ter-uh-kot-uh)Hard-baked clay, used for sculpture and as a building material. It may be glazed or painted.
  • dome (dōm)hemispherical vault; theoretically,an archrotated on its vertical axis. In Mycenaean architecture, domes are beehive-shaped.

Park Hill Cemetery

These were taken on February 27. I think...yeah 27th.
I would like to thank Kelly's iPhone for these pictures...
Inside.
Thank you Kelly.
 
 

Mausoleum([maw-suh-lee-uh m) A monumental tomb. The name derives from the mid-fourth-century BCE tomb of Mausolos at Halikarnassos, one of the Seven Wonders of the ancient world.

First Baptist

I wish this had a mandorla on it. And I wish that didn't say tympanum. Because it isn't! The church architecture confuses me so much!

The picture says amblature but it's suppose to say ambulatory...and even more awkward, ITS WRONG. I looked at a diagram of an ambulatory and I thought it was a band-frieze around the choir or apse (or whatever this is because its not an apse) but I saw the definition and it's a walkway! And this didn't have an ambulatory.
AND.
This guy was having some one on one time with God...and I was just there taking pictures in a hoodie.

Can this count as a campanile? Or it it too small?




Boring.

Pilasters. Pilasters. Pilasters. Location: The Courthouse








This kind of looks like the Parthenon.
Sorry it's dark.
There's that guy praying still...
Again...disregard the altar label.


  • Pendentive(pen-den-tiv) A concave, triangular section of a hemisphere, four of which provide the transition from a square area to the circular base of a covering dome. Although pendentives appear to be hanging (pendant) from the dome, they in fact support it.
  • voussoir (voo-swahr)   A wedge-shaped stone block used in the construction of a true arch. The central voussoir, which sets the arch, is called the keystone.
  • keystone  ([kee-stohn)  the wedge-shaped piece at the summit of an arch, regarded as holding the other pieces in place. 
  •  Corinthian capital (kuh-rin-thee-uh n kap-i-tl) A more ornate form than Doric or Ionic; it consists of a double row of acanthus leaves from which tendrils and flowers grow, wrapped around a bell-shaped echinus. Although this capital form is often cited as the distinguishing feature of the Corinthian order, there is, strictly speaking, no Corinthian order, but only this style of capital used in the Ionic order.
  • Tympanum  (tim-puh-nuh m)  The ornamental recessed space or panel enclosed by the cornices of a triangular pediment
  • wainscoting (weyn-skoh-ting)  Wooden paneling that lines the lower part of the walls of a room
  •  ambulatory (/ˈambyələˌtôrē/;am-byuh-luh-tawr-ee) A covered walkway, outdoors (as in a church cloister) or indoors; especially the passageway around the apse  and the choir of a church.
  • choir (kwahyuh r) The space reserved for clergy and singers in the church, usually east of the transept but in some instances extending into the nave.
  • cupola (/ˈkyo͞opələ/) A small dome, esp. a small dome on a drum on top of a larger dome, adorning a roof or ceiling.
  • Keystone
  • Pilaster
  • Triglyph
  • Metope
  • Dentil Cornice
  • raking cornice (reyk-ing kawr-nis)The cornice on the sloping sides of a pediment.
  • abacus (/ˈabəkəs/; ab-uh-kuh s) The uppermost portion of the capital of a column, usually with a thin slab.
  • echinus (ih-kahy-nuh s)The convex element of a capital directly below the abacus.
  • Fluting
  • archivolt (/ˈärkəˌvōlt/; ahr-kuh-vohlt ) The continuous molding framing an arch. In Romanesque or Gothic architecture, one of the series of concentric bands framing the tympanum.
  • Nave
  • Aisle
  • Transept
  • Campanile (kam-puh-nee-lee) A belltower of a church, usually but not always free standing. (just in case that little bell thing was a campanile...)