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Spire

Architecture Spiral stairSpire light

SPIRE LIGHT (Fr. lucarne), the term given to the windows in a spire which are found in all periods of English Gothic architecture, and in French spires form a very important feature in the composition.

 


Spire
An octagonal spire that sits directly on to a square tower.
Any slender pointed construction surmounting a building; generally a narrow octagonal pyramid set above a square tower.

spire
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Spires are also common and notable as solo structures. After contact with Egyptian architecture and the mania for Egyptian artifacts in the west in the 19th century, towers in the shape of obelisks enjoyed a vogue.

Spire
Also called a steeple, this is the uppermost portion of a tower or roof that tapers to a point at the top.
Brockville ...

The Monument of Light, also known as the Spire of Dublin, is a 393-foot (120-meter) tower made of stainless steel tubes.

Spire
Tall pyramidal or conical feature crowning a tower or turret. Broach: starting from a square base, then carried into an octagonal section by means of triangular faces.

Spire: An elongated, pointed structure which rises from a tower, turret or roof.
Medieval Architecture Glossary of Terms ...

Spire The pyramidal structure soaring from a tower or roof a church.
Steel Siding Heavy siding material which remains very durable and weather resistant.
Story A horizontal division of a building, from the floor to the ceiling above it.

Spire: A sharply pointed pyramidal structure surmounting a tower.
Spandrel: An area between two adjoining arches, often decorated.

Spire
The pointed top of a tower.
Stiff-leaf
A type of foliage ornament typical of the Early English style.

spire : A tall, tapering, acutely pointed roof to a tower, as in the top of a steeple.

Spire - A slender elongated hip roof to (usually, a church) tower tapering to an acute point, either timber framed and clad, or stone.

Spire: A tapering, often elegant, structure set atop a tower. In certain instances, the tower itself has been designed as a spire. On churches, smaller scale spires are often referred to as Steeples.

Spire - The pyramidal structure soaring from a tower or roof a church.
Square - A unit of measure equal to 100 square feet. Three square of shingles, for example, will cover 300 square feet of wall or roof area.

Spire
A tall, tapering, pointed roof on a tower, as in the top of steeple.
Tracery
Ornament of ribs, bars, etc., in panels or screens, as in the upper part of a Gothic window.

spire - a tapering roof topping a tower; steeple
shingles - thin pieces of wood used in overlapping rows to cover roofs and exterior walls of houses; can be cut in decorative shapes ...

Fleche
- spirelet of timber, lead, cast iron etc rising from a roof ridge rather than a tower, and often acting as a ventilator.

ornament crowning spire, tower etc.
Pipe rolls
annual accounts of sheriffs rendered to the king ...

Finial: A slender piece of stone used to decorate the tops of the merlons, spire, tower, balustrade, or other tapering vertical architectural element. Fleur-de-lis: Stylized lily which served as symbol for the French monarchy.

The traditional mosque form consists of a square or rectangular timber hall covered with a pyramid-shaped roof with a pointed spire or finial. The walls are built of logs laid horizontally and intersecting at the corners.

A well-publicized, world-class event can inspire fashion for years. At least that's the case with the 1893 World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, ...

The first major phase of this insular architecture, the early English period, is well represented (except for the 15th-century tower and spire) by the Cathedral of Salisbury (begun 1220).

The purpose of art was to awe and inspire the viewer with the grandeur of God. It also served to symbolize what people believed.

A small ornament on top of a spire, pinnacle or gable.
Fish-Scale Shingles
Overlapping wooden tiles used to clad exterior walls; may take various shapes such as fish-scales, diamonds or squares.

flèche A slender spire atop a tower (French for 'arrow').
fluting Shallow, concave grooves running vertically on the shaft of a column, pilaster or other surface.

Lucarne - A small opening in an attic or a spire. Also called A dormer window.
Lunette - A semicircular opening or tympanum. The term can also be applied to any flat, semicircular surface ...

finial: a carved or moulded ornament crowing a pinnacle, gable or spire.
fluting: shallow rounded grooves, commonly applied vertically to a shaft or column.
flying buttress: a buttress containing a half-arch leaning against a wall.

finial The crowning ornament of a pointed element, such as a spire.
flashing Strips of sheet metal bent to fit the angle between any two roof surfaces or between the roof and any projection, such as a chimney.

Pinnacle - Ornamental crowning spire, tower, etc.
Piscina - Hand basin with drain, usually set against or into a wall.
Pitch - Roof slope.

FINIAL An ornament rising from the peak of a pinnacle, spire, gable, etc.
FLUTING Ornament composed of a series of parallel concave mouldings, often found on column shafts.

FINIAL
Pointed wood or metal ornament at the peak of a roof. A decorative, terminal part of a spire, gable, etc., or projecting upward from the top of a cabinet, breakfront, etc.
FRENCH DOORS
Pair of identical glass-paned doors.

The refined Georgian style with its classical details continue to inspire the architecture of today.
Some places to find Georgian style homes:
Bucks County ...

FINIAL A decorative piece set atop a spire, cupola, gable or gate post.

Crocket - A decorative hook-like spur of stone carved in various leaf shapes and projecting at regular intervals from the angles of spires, pinnacles, canopies, gables etc., in Gothic architecture.

crocket - a small ornament projecting from the sloping angles of pinnacles, spires, etc., typically depicting stylized foliage.

Style of architecture that flourished in Europe from the mid-12th century to the end of the 15th century. It is characterized by the vertical lines of tall pillars and spires, greater height in interior spaces, the pointed arch, rib vaulting, ...

Bay of Choir, Lichfield Cathedral
Lichfield Cathedral is situated in Lichfield, Staffordshire, England. It is the only medieval English cathedral with three spires. Architecturally, the choir (alt. spelling quire) is the area of a chu...

Finial
A small, decorative appendage that finishes an architectural element, especially at the tip of a pinnacle, spire or other tapering vertical element. From the Latin finis, meaning "end".

Its striking characteristics are its pointed arches, its pinnacles and spires, its large buttresses, clustered pillars, vaulted roofs, profusion of ornament, and, on the whole, its lofty, bold character.

Épi - French term for a light finial, generally of metal, but sometimes of terra-cotta, forming the termination of a spire or the angle of a roof.

He also designed or influenced the design of many other English churches. Among other innovations, Wren introduced the single square tower belfry with tall spire that became the hallmark of church architecture in England and the United States.

Interior view of transept and crossing from south transept clerestory
Interior view of transept and crossing from south transept triforium
Interior view of upper level and vaults
Interior of the Spire ...

English architecture, Augustus Pugin, was the innovative architect of the Gothic Revival style of architecture. Gothic Revival buildings a featured pointed or lancet doorways and windows, spire, and vertical features. (p. 18).

The "open-work" spire, such as that of Freiburg, is a German development of a Flamboyant idea, which had much aesthetically to commend it, its lacelike surfaces being often treated with great effectiveness.

York reached ten stories SORI: the curved eaves line of a Japanese roof SPANDREL: the triangular space between the side of an arch, the horizontal above its apex, and the vertical of it's springing; the surface between two arches in an arcade SPIRE: ...

See also: Architecture, Tower, House, Church, Arches