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Steve Oliff ~ Animator/Cartoonist
has generously provided a landing pad for the Arena Conic 2004. |
Eli and Corwin
(ages 10 and 8) gleefully climb to the top of the Arena Conic and perch
atop the prow ridgeline. |
Eli and Corwin
tweek the camera with high fives. |
The back of the
Arena Conic connects the two lobes (regular conic sections). This is
the greatest expanse of hanging plywood in the structure. |
Wide angle view
showing four of the five touch-down points of the conic. |
The backside of
the Arena Conic from a distance. |
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Eli descending
near the front vault. |
Do we feel secure
and confident atop the Arena Conic? Eli points the way! |
Front view of the
Arena Conic shows the vault opening. The peak is approximately 17 feet
high. |
Close-up of the
"horn," the middle of the four peaks where three inverted
cone sections converge. There are no interior supports under this peak. |
The "horn"
as viewed from inside the conic. |
One of the two
skylight openings. In a permanent installation this opening is covered
with transparent clear plexyglas or translucent fiberglass sheeting. |
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View of skylight
opening. |
Taken from atop
the horn, this shot shows the prow of the vault opening with the town
of Point Arena, California in the background. |
From the horn looking
toward the north skylight. |
From the horn looking
down one of the three inverted cone segments. |
The interior of
the Arena Conic is spacious and airy. The roof surface is in constant
curvature. Every point on the roof is part of a cone segment. |
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