Examples of vault in the following topics:
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- The parts of a vault exert lateral thrust that require a counter resistance.
- When vaults are built underground, the ground gives all the resistance required.
- Buttresses are used to supply resistance when intersecting vaults are employed.
- The inclusion of domes represents a wider sense of the word vault.
- Explain the architectural structure and purpose of arches, vaults, and domes.
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- In 2008, the Svalbard Global Seed Vault began storing seeds from around the world as a backup system to the regional seed banks .
- The seed vault is located deep into the rock of an arctic island.
- Conditions within the vault are maintained at ideal temperature and humidity for seed survival, but the deep underground location of the vault in the arctic means that failure of the vault's systems will not compromise the climatic conditions inside the vault.
- The Svalbard Global Seed Vault is a protected storage facility in the arctic for seeds of earth's diverse crops.
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- Multiple arches can be used together to create a vault.
- The simplest type is known as a barrel vault.
- Barrel vaults consist of a line of arches in a row that create the shape of a tunnel.
- When two barrel vaults intersect at right angles, they create a groin vault.
- These are easily identified by the x-shape they create in the ceiling of the vault.
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- The Gothic vault, unlike the semi-circular vault of Roman and Romanesque buildings, can be used to roof rectangular and irregularly shaped plans such as trapezoids.
- This enabled architects to raise vaults much higher than was possible in Romanesque architecture.
- In Gothic architecture the pointed arch is used in every location where a vaulted shape is called for, both structurally and decoratively.
- The increase in the use of large windows during the Gothic period is directly related to the use of the pointed arch, the ribbed vault, and the flying buttress.
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- Romanesque design is also characterized by the presence of arches and openings, arcades, columns, and vaults and roofs.
- In most parts of Europe, Romanesque columns were massive, as they supported thick upper walls with small windows and sometimes heavy vaults.
- In churches, typically the aisles are vaulted, but the nave is roofed with timber, as is the case at both Peterborough and Ely.
- In Italy where open wooden roofs are common, and tie beams frequently occur in conjunction with vaults, the timbers have often been decorated, as at San Miniato al Monte, Florence.
- Vaults of stone or brick took on several different forms and showed marked development during the period, evolving into the pointed, ribbed arch characteristic of Gothic architecture.
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- The Mycenaeans also relied on new techniques of building to create supportive archways and vaults.
- This tomb and others like it are demonstrations of corbeled vaulting that covers an expansive open space.
- The vault is 44 feet high and 48 feet in diameter.
- The citadel site of Tiyrns is known for its Cyclopean vaulted tunnels that run next to its walls and its tightly controlled access to the megaron and the main rooms of the citadel.
- The Treasure of Atreus and others tombs like it are demonstrations of corbeled vaulting that covers an expansive open space.
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- Other characteristics of the Gothic style include the increased use of flying buttresses to support walls, and a shift towards more slender and ornate columns, and vaulted ceilings.
- The interior of the Cathedral, including the groin vaults and pointed arches, demonstrates the Gothic elements of its architecture quite clearly.
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- The technique of building high vaults in masonry was revived and painted murals came into fashion.
- Many large cathedrals and abbey churches had been constructed by the mid 12th century and the engineering skills required to build high arches, stone vaults, tall towers, and the like were well established.
- The style evolved to one that was less heavy, had larger windows, lighter-weight vaulting supported on stone ribs, and above all, the pointed arch that is the defining characteristic of the style now known as Gothic.
- With thinner walls, larger windows, and high pointed arched vaults, the distinctive flying buttresses developed as a means of support.
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- Massive cylindrical piers, groin vaults and low-relief sculptural decoration support rounded arches, arcades, characterize Romanesque churches.
- The desire to increase window space drove the development of new structural techniques, which constitute most of the other distinctive features of the style: pointed arches, rib vaults, buttresses and pinnacles.
- It is typified by the simplicity of its vaults and tracery, the use of lancet windows and smaller amounts of sculptural decoration than either Romanesque or later varieties of Gothic.
- Increasing proliferation and elaboration of sculptural decoration and tracery and the emergence of more complex and decorative vaults marked the transition to Decorated Gothic (late 13th-late 14th centuries).
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- U.S. money, which does not include vault cash at the banks because we already counted the vault cash as bank reserves.
- Using a simple example, the Fed sets the required reserve ratio to 10%, which is the percentage of total reserves that banks must hold as reserves at the Fed or as vault cash.
- Bank either holds $10 in its vault or deposits the $10 with the Fed.