Fact of the Day: Leaning Tower of Pisa
The Leaning Tower of Pisa, an eight-story, 185-foot bell tower in Pisa, Italy, was begun in 1173 and completed in 1350. From the beginning, the tower leaned because of the way the foundation settled. Throughout the building of the tower, architects and engineers tried to straighten it out and compensate for the lean. Before the tower had a major renovation between 1990 and 2001, its lean had reached about 15 feet from the perpendicular, having continued to increase by about one-twentieth of an inch per year. In 1990 the tower was closed and the bells silenced as engineers undertook a major straightening project. Earth was siphoned from underneath the foundations, decreasing the lean by 17 inches to 13.5 feet; engineers predicted it would take 300 years for the structure to return to its 1990 position.
Why post this? Well I was fotunate enough to have climbed to the top of it when I was living overseas. It was a rainy day and very slick and well it was something I can say was inspiring and enhanced my love of Italy. To be able to have touched that real thing and know that people are no longer allowed to climb it because of the leaning puts in me in awe of the things I have been fortunate enough to see and experince. I hope that the straightening project worked!
It also reminds me of the thing that make my life pretty special.
The Leaning Tower of Pisa, an eight-story, 185-foot bell tower in Pisa, Italy, was begun in 1173 and completed in 1350. From the beginning, the tower leaned because of the way the foundation settled. Throughout the building of the tower, architects and engineers tried to straighten it out and compensate for the lean. Before the tower had a major renovation between 1990 and 2001, its lean had reached about 15 feet from the perpendicular, having continued to increase by about one-twentieth of an inch per year. In 1990 the tower was closed and the bells silenced as engineers undertook a major straightening project. Earth was siphoned from underneath the foundations, decreasing the lean by 17 inches to 13.5 feet; engineers predicted it would take 300 years for the structure to return to its 1990 position.
Why post this? Well I was fotunate enough to have climbed to the top of it when I was living overseas. It was a rainy day and very slick and well it was something I can say was inspiring and enhanced my love of Italy. To be able to have touched that real thing and know that people are no longer allowed to climb it because of the leaning puts in me in awe of the things I have been fortunate enough to see and experince. I hope that the straightening project worked!
It also reminds me of the thing that make my life pretty special.
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Date: 2006-11-28 02:26 am (UTC)From:Speaking of which, I don't know if you'd be interested, but we're having a Festival of Light and Dark (a festival celebrating the variety of traditions focused on the coming season.) I'm really excited by it - it'll be both informative and spiritual - and I wondered if you might enjoy it as well. It's next Monday (the 4th) from 5-6 pm, with an amazing food spread afterward (here at Mills.)
Would love to see you. And thanks for the invite to Dickens. I'm really excited.
Namaste
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Date: 2006-11-28 04:08 am (UTC)From: