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500 Years Later, MIT Proves That Leonardo Da Vinci's Bridge Design Works
Popular Mechanics ^ | Oct 10, 2019 | David Grossman

Posted on 06/26/2020 10:00:08 AM PDT by Red Badger

If accepted at the time, the design would have likely revolutionized architecture.

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In the early 1500s, Leonardo da Vinci designed a hypothetical bridge for the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire. It was rejected.

Over 500 years later, an MIT team has recreated the design with a model and have showed that it would have worked.

Da Vinci's design incorporates architectural techniques that would have not been seen for another 300 years.

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Gretchen Ertl

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Researchers at MIT have proven Leonardo da Vinci correct yet again, this time involving his design for what would have been at the time a revolutionary bridge design. Although clients rejected da Vinci's work at the time, over 500 years later, the researchers have proven that his bridge would have worked.

The famed Renaissance Man made his living working with wealthy patrons—people like Ludovico Sforza, the Duke of Milan, who commissioned his painting "The Last Supper." But da Vinci did not want to limit himself to Italian patrons. When Sultan Bayezid II of the Ottoman Empire put out a request for proposals for a bridge connecting capital city Constantinople (now Istanbul) with its neighbor city Galata, da Vinci was eager for the chance to win the contract.

Da Vinci's proposal was radically different than the standard bridge at the time. As described by the MIT group, it was approximately 918 feet long (218 meters, though neither system of measurement had been developed yet) and would have consisted of a flattened arch "tall enough to allow a sailboat to pass underneath with its mast in place...but that would cross the wide span with a single enormous arch," according to an MIT press statement. It would have been the longest bridge in the world at the time by a significant measure, using an unheard of style of design.

It wasn't just length or style that set da Vinci's bridge apart. It also had safety features unheard of at the time. One of the biggest challenges facing any bridge design is that it has to exist in nature no matter the conditions, including wind.

Strong winds have forced many bridge, including relatively modern bridges from the 20th century, into lateral oscillations leading to collapse. Da Vinci would have added what are known as wing walls, abutments out to the side of the bridge, steadying it during harsh conditions. They are now common design elements of modern bridges.

da Vinci’s sketch of the bridge proposal, together with modern drawings. Karly Bast and Michelle Xie

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"It's incredibly ambitious," says recent graduate student Karly Bast, who worked on the project with professor of architecture and of civil and environmental engineering John Ochsendorf and undergraduate Michelle Xie on the project. "It was about 10 times longer than typical bridges of that time."

Bast, Oschsendorf, and Xie analyzed available documents regarding the bridge, the possible materials and construction methods of the period, and the geographic conditions of the river estuary then known as the Golden Horn, now called Haliç, where the Sultan wanted the bridge.

Da Vinci's sketches and letters to the Sultan regarding the bridge can be found in what's known as Manuscript L, a small Codex stored in the Institut de France in Paris. Da Vinci wrote that

I, your faithful servant, understand that it has been your intention to erect a bridge from Galata (Pera) to Stambul… across the Golden Horn (‘Haliç”), but this has not been done because there were no experts available. I, your subject, have determined how to build the bridge. It will be a masonry bridge as high as a building, and even tall ships will be able to sail under it.

He does not specify what materials he would need, but the team assumed that da Vinci was talking about stone—neither wood or brick would have been able to sustain a bridge of that size at the time. The word "masonry" also tipped off the team to a design strategy. Like the classic masonry bridges of ancient Rome, with which da Vinci would have been familiar, it would stand solely through the forces of physics and gravity with no need for fasteners or mortar.

Since building a full-scale bridge would have been unwieldily, the team resorted to building a model. Using 126 blocks, they built the bridge at a scale of 1 to 500, making it around three feet long.

"It was time-consuming, but 3-D printing allowed us to accurately recreate this very complex geometry," Bast says. Da Vinci's design is well-known among historians, and has even inspired a modern bridge in Norway. But being inspired is different than proving the original design correct.

"It's the power of geometry."

"That was not a test to see if his design would work with the technology from his time," Bast says. The model is "held together by compression only. We wanted to really show that the forces are all being transferred within the structure."

The crucial moment came, as it does in projects like these, with the adding of the keystone.

"When we put it in, we had to squeeze it in. That was the critical moment when we first put the bridge together. I had a lot of doubts," Bast recalls. But "when I put the keystone in, I thought, 'this is going to work.' And after that, we took the scaffolding out, and it stood up."

"It's the power of geometry" that makes it work, she says. "This is a strong concept. It was well thought out." Further tests showed that the bridge could have even stood its own against earthquakes to an extent far beyond other bridges at the time.

There are still mysteries surrounding the project. "Was this sketch just freehanded, something he did in 50 seconds, or is it something he really sat down and thought deeply about? It's difficult to know."

While it's difficult to know da Vinci's intentions, one thing is now relatively certain: the bridge would have worked.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Education; History; Science
KEYWORDS: davinci; godsgravesglyphs; italy; leonardo; leonardodavinci; middleages; ottomanempire; renaissance
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To: Red Badger
You saw what I did there.
Clapton decided not to wait for Harrison, either for the bridge or the actual title of the composition.

21 posted on 06/26/2020 10:48:55 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Imagine an imaginary menagerie manager imagining managing an imaginary menagerie.)
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To: Red Badger

I’m very biased, but I would remove Edison from your list, and I would add Newton.


22 posted on 06/26/2020 10:49:21 AM PDT by EEGator
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To: Red Badger; aquila48
All great men and we were lucky to have had them. But Da Vinci seems to have been in a class all his own... From Wiki:

Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci ... was an Italian polymath of the Renaissance whose areas of interest included science and invention, drawing, painting, sculpture, architecture, music, mathematics, engineering, literature, anatomy, geology, astronomy, botany, paleontology, and cartography. He has been variously called the father of palaeontology, ichnology, and architecture, and is widely considered one of the greatest painters of all time (despite perhaps only 15 of his paintings having survived).

23 posted on 06/26/2020 10:54:47 AM PDT by LibWhacker
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To: EEGator

Yes, I was hesitant for Edison. Newton should be on the list......................


24 posted on 06/26/2020 11:01:43 AM PDT by Red Badger (To a liberal, 9-11 was 'illegal fireworks activity'..........................)
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To: Red Badger

BOOKMARK


25 posted on 06/26/2020 11:13:51 AM PDT by DFG
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To: Red Badger

26 posted on 06/26/2020 11:14:28 AM PDT by ElkGroveDan (My tagline is in the shop.)
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To: Red Badger

Before we look at this bridge, where was DaVinci on race?


27 posted on 06/26/2020 11:28:57 AM PDT by Titus-Maximus (The trouble with socialism is that you soon run out of other people's zoo animals to eat.)
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its just an arch, been around since the Roman Empire.


28 posted on 06/26/2020 11:37:50 AM PDT by RBStealth (-- raised by wolves, educated by nuns)
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To: Red Badger

I wonder why the da Vinci used a ‘pair of pants’ design to connect to the support point on each side. Yes it saves a bit of material to put that arch in there but it seems to be a lot of extra work for no additional gain. Was it aesthetics?


29 posted on 06/26/2020 11:39:41 AM PDT by hecticskeptic
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To: hecticskeptic

Ars gratia artis...................


30 posted on 06/26/2020 11:47:56 AM PDT by Red Badger (To a liberal, 9-11 was 'illegal fireworks activity'..........................)
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To: Titus-Maximus

In his time they were called Moors................


31 posted on 06/26/2020 11:51:35 AM PDT by Red Badger (To a liberal, 9-11 was 'illegal fireworks activity'..........................)
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To: Red Badger

Ancient Alien IQ in mortal or ET? Ask Georgio


32 posted on 06/26/2020 11:52:34 AM PDT by wildbill (The older I get, the less 'life in prison" means to me)
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To: Red Badger
Suddenly I heard the voice my late father saying,"You could walk a mule across it." His favorite description of a well-made thing
33 posted on 06/26/2020 12:01:07 PM PDT by JoeFromSidney (Colonel (Retired) USAF.)
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To: JoeFromSidney

A thing of beauty is forever...................


34 posted on 06/26/2020 12:02:35 PM PDT by Red Badger (To a liberal, 9-11 was 'illegal fireworks activity'..........................)
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To: Vermont Lt

It looks like Da Vinci was leveraging well establish Roman building techniques by leveraging the arch along more than one axis. Heck a dome is just an arch rotated about its central axis.

If this bridge were to be over a river I would expect that the Romans would simply divert the river, construct as scaffold, build their arch bridge, then allow the river to resume it’s previous course. Brute force IOW’s.


35 posted on 06/26/2020 12:12:07 PM PDT by Tallguy (Facts be d@mned! The narrative must be protected at all costs!)
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To: Red Badger
Simplicity is the ultimate sophistication. ”

- Leonardo da Vinci

36 posted on 06/26/2020 12:16:52 PM PDT by 11th_VA (May you live in interesting times - Ancient Chinese Proverb)
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To: redshawk

Awesome...will have to look for those.


37 posted on 06/26/2020 12:17:38 PM PDT by Jane Long (Praise God, from whom ALL blessings flow.)
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To: 11th_VA
Everything should be made as simple as possible, but no simpler. - Albert Einstein .................
38 posted on 06/26/2020 12:18:24 PM PDT by Red Badger (To a liberal, 9-11 was 'illegal fireworks activity'..........................)
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To: hecticskeptic
I wonder why the da Vinci used a ‘pair of pants’ design to connect to the support point on each side.

Da Vinci studied nature - his designs mimicked what he saw in nature (ie; his 'Tank' design was modeled after a turtle)

39 posted on 06/26/2020 12:19:02 PM PDT by 11th_VA (May you live in interesting times - Ancient Chinese Proverb)
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To: hecticskeptic

The design also looks to borrow from a ‘Roman Arch’ design, on 4 sides


40 posted on 06/26/2020 12:21:29 PM PDT by 11th_VA (May you live in interesting times - Ancient Chinese Proverb)
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