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shell concreteの例文

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  • Inside the Pantheon's single-shell concrete dome is coffering which greatly decreases the weight.
  • With a concrete world's largest reinforced thin-shell concrete dome.
  • The fa鏰de is clad in stone and there is a wavy shell concrete canopy above the street level.
  • In a scant 16.8 seconds the world's largest thin-shell concrete dome dissolved into a cloud of dust and debris.
  • Flooring was oyster-shell concrete covered in 1820 with boards at a height of 18 inches ( 45.7 centimeters ).
  • Spanish engineer-architect Eduardo Torroja, with Manuel Sanchez, designed the Market Hall in Algeciras, Spain, with a thin shell concrete dome.
  • The church's circular facade consists of three tiers of whitewashed, thin-shell concrete parabolic arches, the top one forming a bell-tower.
  • In a scant 16 . 8 seconds the world's largest thin-shell concrete dome dissolved into a cloud of dust and debris.
  • Visitors can take in a schoolhouse built in the 1780s of cedar, cypress and oyster-shell concrete floor, and the Spanish Quarter Museum.
  • The building was designed by Howard Van Doren Shaw to be a fireproof design of poured reinforced concrete columns and an open-shell concrete floor.
  • These studies, which included testing of new materials like aluminum and thin-shell concrete, were published by the University of North Carolina in " Structures of Warped Surface ."
  • The Church of Holy Sacrifice became the first circular chapel with the altar in its center in the country, and the first to have a thin shell concrete dome.
  • The house of Joseph E . Plummer is believed to be the first of nearly a dozen homes that had been constructed, using oyster shell concrete ( shellcrete ) obtained from Copano beach.
  • Pultar's relationship with Billington continued : they co-wrote an article based on a report they had penned together while Pultar was still at Princeton; and Pultar translated Billington's " Thin Shell Concrete Structures " ( 1965 ) into Turkish.
  • The two standing cabins were among at least five, built about 1806 of a unique oyster shell concrete called tabby, that housed up to 150 slaves on Hamilton Plantation, a pre-Civil War property flanked by the Frederica River on the island's western shore.
  • These included the earliest catenary roof constructed in the United States, which roofed the dome of the Travel and Transport Building ( Bennet, Burnham and Holabird ) and the first thin shell concrete roof in the United States, on the small, multi-vaulted Brook Hill Farm Dairy built for the 1934 season of the fair.
  • Designed by Edgarton and Edgarton and built from 1949 through 1951, the structure is significant as an example of a World War I, World War II and Aroostook War commemorative and as " an early and sophisticated example of single-span thin-shell concrete roof construction . " It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.