Home

Dome

A dome is a rounded architectural element that forms the roof or ceiling of a building, typically a hemisphere or segment of a sphere. It defines interior space without columns and is carried by a supporting drum, pendentives, or a masonry shell.

In design, domes behave as compressive shells; their geometry directs weight to the base, allowing wide, open

Historically, domes appear in the ancient Mediterranean and Near East. The Pantheon in Rome (c. 126 CE)

Types and variants include hemispherical domes, pointed or ogival domes, and onion domes, plus polygonal domes

Domes remain common in religious architecture, civic buildings, planetariums, sports arenas, and mosques. They offer expansive

interiors.
Traditional
domes
were
built
from
brick,
masonry,
or
concrete;
modern
versions
may
use
steel
frames
with
concrete
or
metal
cladding,
or
lightweight
panels
in
geodesic
configurations.
is
a
landmark
example
of
a
large
unreinforced
concrete
dome.
Byzantine
architects
advanced
dome
construction,
culminating
in
Hagia
Sophia.
The
Renaissance
produced
influential
domes
such
as
Brunelleschi’s
dome
for
Florence
Cathedral.
that
approximate
a
sphere.
Geodesic
domes,
designed
by
Buckminster
Fuller
in
the
20th
century,
use
a
network
of
triangles
for
strength
and
light
weight.
interior
spaces,
distinctive
acoustics,
and
dramatic
exterior
silhouettes.