
The Eiffel Tower in 1889 |
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Sauvestre proposed stonework pedestals to dress
the legs, monumental arches to link the columns and the first
level, large glass-walled halls on each level, a bulb-shaped design
for the top and various other ornamental features to decorate
the whole of the structure. In the end the project was simplified,
but certain elements such as the large arches at the base were
retained, which in part give it its very characteristic appearance.
The curvature of the uprights is mathematically
determined to offer the most efficient wind resistance possible.
As Eiffel himself explains: "All the cutting force of the
wind passes into the interior of the leading edge uprights. Lines
drawn tangential to each upright with the point of each tangent
at the same height, will always intersect at a second point, which
is exactly the point through which passes the flow resultant from
the action of the wind on that part of the tower support situated
above the two points in question. Before coming together at the
high pinnacle, the uprights appear to burst out of the ground,
and in a way to be shaped by the action of the wind".
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