Home Architecture Projecting Stars, Triangles and Concrete
Article
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Projecting Stars, Triangles and Concrete

The Early History of Geodesics Domes, from Walter Bauersfeld to Richard Buckminster Fuller
  • Martino Peña Fernández-Serrano EMAIL logo and José Calvo López
Published/Copyright: July 24, 2019
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

Abstract

Sometimes scientific-technical objects can be given an extended meaning as cultural icons and be received in art and architecture. To this end, the object must be detached from its original context and viewed from different, new perspectives.

In 1922 Walter Bauersfeld constructed one of the first geodesic domes for testing projection devices in Jena. Walter Gropius and Lázló Moholy-Nagy were among the first to visit the Jena Planetarium; Moholy-Nagy received the dome in his book ›Von Material zu Architektur‹. Richard Buckminster Fuller further developed Bauersfeld’s concept from the 1940s and patented the construction principle of a geodesic dome under the name ›Building Construction‹ in 1954. His patent bears resemblances to the Bauersfeld Planetarium in Jena, which can be demonstrated by manuscripts by Bauersfeld from the Zeiss Archive in Jena. Fuller, on the other hand, also used the geodesic dome to explain his theory as Synergetic. The article traces the transformation of the technical object conceived by Bauersfeld via Moholy-Nagy and Fuller into a cultural icon of the 20th century.

  1. Abbildungsnachweise

    Fig. 1– 4, 6, 8, 9, 14, 20: Zeiss Archiv — Fig. 5: Krausse 2006, 63 — Fig. 10: Wermer 1953, 131 — Fig. 11: Hanisch/Bucher 2006, 100 — Fig. 19: José Calvo López

References

Bauersfeld 1919 Walther Bauersfeld: Kugelunterteilung (1. April 1919), Manuscript, Archiv Carl Zeiss AGSearch in Google Scholar

Bauersfeld 1922a Walther Bauersfeld: Kuppelkonstruktion für das Projektionsplanetarium Manuscript, Archiv Carl Zeiss AG, 1922Search in Google Scholar

Bauersfeld 1922b Walther Bauersfeld: Kugelunterteilung. Rechnung der Stablängen für Kugelteilung, Manuscript, Archiv Carl Zeiss AG, 1922Search in Google Scholar

Breidbach 2011 Breidbach, Olaf: Ernst Haeckel, Walther Bauersfeld und die Konstruktionsidee des Jenaer Planetariums, in: Meinl, Hans: Die Weltenmaschine. Beiträge zur frühen Geschichte des Zeiss-Planetariums Jena. Jena 2011, 45 – 61Search in Google Scholar

Firma Carl Zeiss 1922a Firma Carl Zeiss: Verfahren zur Herstellung von Kuppeln und ähnlichen gekrümmten Flächen aus Eisenbeton (Patent nº 415395 class 37a group 2, 9. November 1922, Deutsches Reich Patentamt, Berlin 1922)Search in Google Scholar

Firma Carl Zeiss 1922b Firma Carl Zeiss: Knotenpunktverbindung für eiserne Netzwerke (Patent n º 420823 class 37b group 3. 9. November 9 1922, Deutsches Reich Patentamt, Berlin 1922)Search in Google Scholar

Fuller 1954 Fuller, Richard Buckminster: Building Construction (Patent nº 2.682.235, June 29, 1954, United States Patent Office 1954)Search in Google Scholar

Fuller 1969 Fuller, Richard Buckminster: Operating Manual for Spaceship Earth New York 1969Search in Google Scholar

Fuller 1975 Fuller, Richard Buckminster: Synergetics. Explorations in the Geometry of Thinking New York 1975Search in Google Scholar

Fuller 1985 Fuller, Richard Buckminster: The Artifacts of R. Buckminster Fuller 3. The Geodesic Revolution, Part 1, 1947 –1959 New York 1985Search in Google Scholar

Hanisch/Bucher 2006 Hanisch, Carolina/Bucher, Sebastian: Kultur der Technik. Das Zeiss-Planetarium als Austellungs- und Illusionsraum, in: Herrmann, Hans-Christian von: Wissen in Bewegung. 80 Jahre Zeiss-Planetarium Jena Jena 2006, 95 –100Search in Google Scholar

Herrmann 2006 Herrmann, Hans-Christian von: Wissen in Bewegung. 80 Jahre Zeiss-Planetarium Jena Jena 2006Search in Google Scholar

Kurze 2011 Kurze, Bertram: Die Bauten 11 und 23 von Carl Zeiss Jena, in: Meinl, Hans: Die Weltenmaschine. Beiträge zur frühen Geschichte des Zeiss-Planetariums Jena. Jena 2011, 62 – 76Search in Google Scholar

Krausse 2006 Krausse, Joachim: Das Zeiss Planetarium, in: Herrmann, Hans-Christian von: Wissen in Bewegung. 80 Jahre Zeiss-Planetarium Jena Jena 2006, 49 – 79Search in Google Scholar

Meinl 2011 Meinl, Hans: Die Weltenmaschine. Beiträge zur frühen Geschichte des Zeiss-Planetariums Jena. Jena 2011Search in Google Scholar

Moholy-Nagy 1929 Moholy-Nagy, Lázló: Von Material zu Architektur Passau 1929Search in Google Scholar

Moholy-Nagy 1947 Moholy-Nagy, Lázló: The new vision and abstract of an artist. New York 1947Search in Google Scholar

Rothman 1989 Rothman, Tony: Science a la Mode. Physical Fashions and Fictions Princeton 1989Search in Google Scholar

Wermer 1953 Wermer, Helmut: Die Sterne dürfet ihr verschwenden Stuttgart 1953Search in Google Scholar

Published Online: 2019-07-24
Published in Print: 2019-07-24

© 2017 Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

Downloaded on 20.1.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/ATC-2017-0006/html
Scroll to top button