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Montreal Expo '67

Buckminster Fuller designed a geodesic dome for Montreal Expo '67 based on a 16 frequency, class I, icosahedron. The dome is 250 feet across at the equator and is 210 feet high at its highest point. The dome was made from steel pipe and was covered in an acrylic skin.

The following document once described the Montreal dome on page 50 during a Buckminster Fuller exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City. The document stated that the Montreal dome was Fuller's greatest achievement. Unfortunately, the specific link for this document is no longer online.

Here are the summary statistics for the Montreal dome.


Class I Icosahedron  Frequency 16  Radius 125.000000  Diameter 250.000000

Minimum length 7.228691
Maximum length 10.325496   1.428405 times longer
Average length 9.350667   Stdev 0.707326
Struts per face      408
Total  faces          20
Struts per sphere   8160
Length count   72


There are 72 different strut lengths in this dome.

The following image looks similar to the Montreal dome.

c1i16.png

c1i16.png

This image shows you the full geodesic sphere as it was built in Montreal on an island in the St. Lawrence River.


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