Modified Catenary Model in the
St. Louis Gateway Arch Abstract 모더니스트 건축가 에로 사리넨(Eero Saarinen)이 설계한 미주리주 세인트루이스의 게이트웨이 아치는 축조된 1965년부터 지금까지 미주리주의 투어리스트들을 끌어모으는 랜드마크로 자리잡았다. 저자는 게이트웨이 아치의 디자인 과정에서 간단한 도식이 사용되었을 것을 추론하고 이를 연구하기 위해 조사를 진행했다. 본 보고서는 아치의 설계 및 축조 과정에서 활용된 현수선 도식을 설명한 Osserman의 Mathematics of the Gateway Arch 글을 읽고 정리하여 이해한 내용을 재정리하고, 글에 명시된 식을 Grasshopper 3D에 적용하여 변수 및 정의역에 변화를 주면서 생산한 다양한 대안 디자인을 수록했다.
Esthetical components of architecture typically consist of mathematical perfection and harmony. One example that reinforces such an assumption is the St. Louis Gateway Arch, the tallest man-made structure in the western hemisphere1 designed by modernist architect Eero Saarinen in 1965. Saarinen had conducted a design study through modifying a chain hanging in between two posts, which depicted a simple form of a catenary, a curve that describes the shape of a flexible hanging chain or cable.2 A catenary, like a parabola, must consist of a point where 𝑓'(𝑥) = 0 and domain range [𝑥1, 𝑥2] where 𝑓'(𝑥1) < 0 and 𝑓'(𝑥2) > 0.[F1]
Design Process
[Figure 1] [Figure 2] Modifying the density of the chain and the gravitational force exerted at the lowest point of the curve—where the y vector force (the vertical load applied to a point of the arc) is the greatest[F2]—Saarinen pursued a weighted catenary that would become the centerline of the arc sweep. A weighted catenary, or modified catenary is distinguished from an original curvature, as such modified versions consist of variables such as unequal density of hanging line, gravitational force, and the additional weight it supports at the lowest point. The study of catenary was first conducted by Galileo Galilei during the 18th century.3 Afterwards, Robert Hooke
1675 made the connection of the simple arc as an esthetical component. “As hangs the chain, so stands the arch,” he said, which roughly translates to: “the geometry of a standing arch should mirror that of a hanging chain.”4 Saarinen had adopted the earlier pursuit of aesthetics in his own design process.
Gateway Arch Specifications Gateway Arch is a tube-like structure whose centerline is an inverted catenary. The equation of the flattened centerline is 𝑦 = 𝐴𝑐𝑜𝑠ℎ(𝐵𝑥) + 𝐶 where 𝐴 = 0. 69(1/𝐵).5 According to Osserman, the centerline of the curve is given by the equation 𝑦 = 693. 8597 − (68. 7672)𝑐𝑜𝑠ℎ(0. 0100333𝑥), measured in feet. The front view of the centerline is depicted in figure 3. Figure 4 is the isometric graphic render image of the Gateway Arch, utilizing the variable specifications supplied by Osserman.
[Figure 3]
Lohaff, Hiking Missouri Carlson, “Catenary” 3 Osserman, “Mathematics of the Gateway Arch,” 221.
[Figure 4]
Modification of Variables The key function utilized in Peluso’s Grasshopper model[F4] of the Gateway Arch is the catenary function, which requires start and end points of the curve, length of the curvature, and the direction of gravity to produce a catenary curve. This existing grasshopper function is futile for the aim of the design investigation as the variables for the function do not refer to the modification of the gravitational factor nor the A, B, and C values of the original equation of curvature y=Acosh(Bx)+C. Thus, the study necessitates a separate graphing process. The variables of which the study modified are as followed: Variable
Test Function
A
𝑦 = 693. 8597 − (90)𝑐𝑜𝑠ℎ(0. 0100333𝑥)
B
𝑦 = 693. 8597 − (68. 7672)𝑐𝑜𝑠ℎ(0. 02𝑥)
C
𝑦 = 500 − (68. 7672)𝑐𝑜𝑠ℎ(0. 0100333𝑥)
The author hypothesized that the modification of variable A or B will result in a steeper and slimmer
1 2
HS30322 Justin Hong (홍승우)
4 5
Osserman, 220. Osserman, 221.