Alberti, Leone Battista, Architecture, 1755

Page concordance

< >
Scan Original
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
< >
page |< < of 320 > >|
1
CHAP. XII.
Of Coverings, ſome are to the open Air,
and
ſome are within; ſome conſiſt of
ſtrait
Lines, others of curve, and ſome of both:
We
may add, not improperly, that ſome are
of
Wood, and ſome of Stone.
We will firſt,
according
to our Cuſtom, mention one Obſer­
vation
which relates in general to all Sorts of
Coverings
; which is this: That all manner of
Roofs
, or Coverings have their Ribs, Nerves,
Finiſhings
, and Shells, or Cruſts, juſt the ſame
as
the Wall: Which will appear from the
Conſideration
of the Thing itſelf.
To begin
with
thoſe of Wood, and conſiſting of ſtrait
Lines
; it is neceſſary for ſupporting the Cover
to
lay very ſtrong Beams acroſs from one Wall
to
the other; which, as we took Notice be­
fore
, are Columns laid tranſverſe: Theſe
Beams
therefore, are a Sort of Ribs; and if
it
were not for the Expences, who would not
wiſh
to have the whole Building conſiſt, if we
may
uſe the Expreſſion, of nothing but Ribs
and
ſolid Work; that is to ſay, of continued
Columns
and Beams cloſe compacted?
but we
here
conſult Oeconomy, and ſuppoſe every
Thing
to be ſuperfluous, that without Pre­
judice
to the Strength of the Work, may be
poſſibly
retrenched; and for this Reaſon, we
leave
Spaces between the Beams.
Between
theſe
we lay the Croſs-beams, Rafters, and the
like
; which may not at all improperly be
reckoned
the Ligatures: To theſe we fit and
joyn
Boards and Planks of greater Breadth,
which
there is no Reaſon why we ſhould not
call
theFiniſhing; and in the ſame Way of think­
ing
, the Pavement and Tiling is the Outward
Shell
, and the Ceiling, or Roof, which is over
our
Head the Inward.
If this be granted, let
us
conſider whether there is any Thing ne­
ceſſary
to be obſerved with Relation to any of
theſe
Parts, that having duly examined it, we
may
the more eaſily underſtand what belongs
to
Coverings of Stone.
We will ſpeak of them
therefore
as briefly as poſſible: Firſt, taking
Notice
of one Thing not foreign to our Pur­
poſe
.
There is a very vicious Practice among
our
modern Architects; which is, that in
order
to make their Ceilings, they leave great
Holes
in the very Ribs of the Building to let
the
Heads of the Beams into after the Wall is
finiſhed
; which not only weakens the Struc­
ture
, but alſo makes it more expoſed to Fire;
becauſe
by theſe Holes the Flames find a
Paſſage
from one Apartment to another.
For
which
Reaſon, I like the Method uſed among
the
Ancients, of ſetting in the Wall ſtrong
Tables
of Stone called Corbels, upon which
they
laid the Heads of their Beams.
If you
would
bind the Wall, and the Beams together,
you
have Braſs Cramps, and Braces, and
Catches
or Notches in the Corbel itſelf, which
will
ſerve for that Purpoſe.
The Beams ought
to
be perfectly ſound and clear; and eſpeci­
ally
about the Middle of its Length it ought
to
be free from the leaſt Defect, placing your
Ear
at one End of it while the other is ſtruck,
if
the Sound come to you dead, and flat, it is
a
Sign of ſome private Infirmity.
Beams that
have
Knots in them are abſolutely to be re­
jected
, eſpecially if there are many, or if they
are
crouded together in a Cluſter.
The Side
of
the Timber that lies neareſt the Heart,
muſt
be planed, and laid uppermoſt in the
Building
; but the Part that is to lie under­
moſt
, muſt be planed very ſuperficially, only
the
Bark, nay, and of that hardly any, or as
little
as poſſible.
Which-ſoever Side has a
Defect
that runs croſſways of the Beam, lay
uppermoſt
; if there is a Crak longways, ne­
v̊er
venture it of the Side, but lay it either
uppermoſt
, or rather undermoſt.
If you hap­
pen
to have Occaſion to bore a Hole in it, or
any
Opening, never meddle with the Middle
of
its length, nor its lower Superficies.
If, as in
Churches
, the Beams are to be laid in Couples;
leave
a Space of ſome Inches between them,
that
they may have Room to exhale, and not
be
ſpoyled by heating one another: And it
will
not be amiſs to lay the two Beams of the
ſame
Couple different Ways, that both their
Heads
may not lie upon the ſame Pillow;
but
where one has its Head, the other may
have
its Foot: For by this Means the Strength
of
the one's Foot will aſſiſt the Weakneſs
of
the other's Head; and ſo vice verſa. The

Text layer

  • Dictionary
  • Places

Text normalization

  • Original
  • Regularized
  • Normalized

Search


  • Exact
  • All forms
  • Fulltext index
  • Morphological index