Europe in Three Dimensions—and More

You’ve been playing with 3-dimensional shapes, such as blocks and balls, since you were little. Architects and builders work with the same shapes to create huts, houses, castles, cathedrals, and palaces.

This story was created for the Google Expeditions project by ePublishing Partners, now available on Google Arts & Culture

Guggenheim Museum Bilbao (1994-97) by Aitor OrtizGuggenheim Bilbao

On this Expedition through Europe, we’ll be looking for 3-dimensional shapes in structures old and new. We’ll also be travelling back in time and across space, which will add even more dimensions to our learning.

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Shapes and shelters from the stone age

We’ve travelled to the Irish National Heritage Park in Wexford, Ireland, to look at an early Christian monastery. The buildings we’ll examine are over 1,200 years old! 

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Our ancestors all over the world built simple structures like these, combining cylinders, cubes, cones, and other basic 3-dimensional shapes. As we tour the monastery, we’ll find 3-D shapes and analyse how the shapes work together to make buildings better.

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The round house: cylinders and cones

These one-walled huts are cylinders, shapes with circular ends and straight sides. The roofs are cones. A cone has a flat circular base and a curved side that tapers to a point.

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Rectangular prism

A prism is a solid object that has flat faces, identical ends, and the same cross-section along its length. Below the roof, this ancient church has 4 rectangular walls. It is a rectangular prism. 

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Triangular prism

The roof of the church has identical triangles for ends and 3 rectangular sides, all the same length. It’s a triangular prism. One side of this prism is the same size as the base of the rectangular prism it sits on.

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Four walls and rounded roofs

These 4-walled structures have rounded roofs. The roof in the foreground is a rough dome. The roof behind it is an irregular pyramid with rounded edges. Smoke from a central hearth would rise through the centre point of the roof.

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Resurrected shapes in Roman Pompeii

We have arrived in Pompeii, Italy. In 79 CE, Mount Vesuvius, the volcano in the distance, erupted, destroying the town but preserving it in ashes. Pompeii was brought back to life in modern times by archaeologists, historians, artists and writers.

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We’re standing at the edge of the forum, the centre of town life in the cities of the Roman Empire. In this grand public space, we can see how skilfully Roman architects and builders used basic 3-dimensional shapes.

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The shapes of public order

The Romans built straight streets and walls that met at right angles. Notice the flat, rectangular stones that paved the streets and created steps. Main streets were often lined with round columns, made by stacking smaller cylinders.

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Big, bold, and built to last

The Romans continue to impress us with their mastery of shapes and with the massive scope of their building projects. Stone was quarried, then cut and carved into cubes, cylinders, and other shapes, and transported to building sites.

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Pompeiian polyhedrons

Polyhedrons are shapes that have faces, edges, and vertices (corner points). Cubes and rectangular prisms have 6 faces, edges at right angles, and 8 vertices. The bricks in an arch are trapezoidal prisms. Two of their 6 sides are trapezoids.

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Light shapes for heavy loads

Roman architects followed an ancient Mediterranean tradition of using columns to create open walls, or colonnades. Long, straight rectangular slabs, called lintels, were laid across the tops of the columns to support upper levels or roofs. Lintels are rectangular prisms.

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Shapes for worship

We are standing in Sultan Ahmet Park in Istanbul, Turkey. Ahead of us is one of the world’s oldest and largest places of worship, Hagia Sofia, a church dedicated to Divine Wisdom. The church was built in 532–537 CE, by order of the Byzantine emperor Justinian I.

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Hagia Sofia, which is now a museum, is an enduring testament to the power of solid circular shapes in architecture. The building is a beautiful composition of arches, spheres, and partial spheres.

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Spherical structures

Hagia Sofia’s central dome is 55 metres above the floor and 33 meters in diameter. The dome is supported on the inside by an intricate system of arches and columns. The building is buttressed by cylindrical walls, half-domes, and arches. 

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Sphere, domes, and polyhedrons

A sphere is a perfectly round solid shape. A dome is a truncated sphere with a spherical surface and a flat surface, its base. The base of this dome rests on a 12-sided polyhedron, which in turn rests on a rectangular prism. 

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Islamic domes, cylinders, and cones

The Sultan Ahmet Mosque is also called the Blue Mosque, after its stunning cobalt and turquoise interior tiles. The mosque is composed of the same shapes as the Hagia Sophia. The minarets are cylinders topped by cones.

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Protective polyhedrons

We have travelled to Ávila, Spain, to examine the Muralla de Ávila, the city’s great wall. This massive structure, which dates from the 11th century, encloses 31 hectares (about 76.5 acres) in a huge irregular rectangle. 

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The walls combine the shapes of polyhedrons and cylinders. Arches help support towers and create gates.

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Polyhedrons on parade

Ávila´s great wall is a masterwork of masonry. The irregular stones were chiselled into polyhedrons and then carefully matched and levelled to form horizontal rows. A polyhedron is a shape with flat sides, edges, and vertices, or corners.

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Polyhedrons and arches

Turning our backs to Ávila’s great wall, we see buildings from both Renaissance and modern times. We also see basic 3-dimensional shapes. The church ahead is composed almost entirely of stacked rectangular prisms.

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Multifaceted walls and spires

We’re on top of Castle Hill in Budapest, Hungary, admiring the Matthias Church, which was built in the last half of the 14th century and restored in the 19th century. Like other buildings in the late Gothic style, the church is composed of many shapes with multiple faces.

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The tallest tower has 8 faces, which makes it an octagonal prism. If you look very closely beneath the surface decorations, you’ll see that the tower’s tall narrow spire is a pyramid.

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Towering pyramids

Pyramids are 3-dimensional shapes with flat, triangular faces that meet at a point. The smaller, lower red pyramids on Matthias Church are square pyramids. The taller red triangular shape is a hexagonal pyramid—it has 6 sides.

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The Château d’Ussé

We are in the Loire valley region of France, visiting the Château d’Ussé. This castle looks like a building from a fairy tale—and legend says that it inspired the story of the Sleeping Beauty. The castle was built in the 16th through the 18th centuries. 

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We can see many 3-dimensional shapes in this castle’s design, including cubes, rectangular prisms, trapezoidal prisms, cylinders, pyramids, and cones.

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Pointed towers

Cones and pyramids sit on top of cubes and cylinders. A cone has a flat base and a curved face that rises to a central point. A pyramid has a flat base and multiple triangular faces that rise to a point.

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Trapezoids and arches

The huge stones of the outer walls are mostly rectangular prisms. But some stones are trapezoidal prisms that are used to compose even larger 6-sized trapezoidal shapes. A roof in the upper left is also shaped like a trapezoidal prism.

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A special kind of triangular prisms

This is a common roof shape, but it is a special kind of triangular prism called a truncated triangular prism. The triangular ends truncate the prism at an oblique angle.

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Frank Gehry at play with 3-D shapes

We are in Bilbao, Spain, visiting the Guggenheim Museum. This modern building, designed by the architect Frank Gehry, was completed in 1997. Frank Gerry’s buildings are recognizable by their unusual curved and billowing shapes.

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Curved shapes that create gates

Motorists approaching or leaving the Guggenheim Museum drive through a bright red circle and past other curved shapes. They are sections of a torus, a circular shape that forms a ring. 

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When you look at a Gehry building from the outside, it can be very hard to imagine what the inside spaces are like. This structure’s design plays with spiral, spherical, and trapezoidal 3-dimensional shapes that support each other in a manner that makes the whole building seem mobile.

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Shapes that go with the flow

Both the road and the sidewalk are long ramps that curve around the spirals, cubes, and trapezoidal prisms of the Guggenheim. The irregular 3-dimensional shapes that make up the building contrast with the very regular shapes of the buildings across the street.

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Shapes on the London skyline

Here we are in London, England, on the Thames River. Ahead of us is Tower Bridge. The towers are stacks of cubes with cylinders or hexagonal prisms at the corners and cones and truncated pyramids for roofs. 

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London’s skyline includes very old buildings, made of the shapes you expect to find in buildings, and very new buildings that surprise the eye. One very large skyscraper is called the Gherkin because it’s shaped like . . . yup, a very large pickle!

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Towers old and new

This is the Tower of London, an ancient fortress composed of cubes, rectangular prisms, cylinders, and truncated spheres. To the left, you can see the top of the Gherkin, a slightly bulging cylinder that curves from base to top, where it tapers to a point.

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A pyramid of glass

Modern glass and steel structures along the Thames have variations of cylindrical and spherical shapes as well as polyhedrons. The triangular tower in the distance is an irregular pyramid known as the Shard, because it resembles a sliver of ice.

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