An arch is a curved vertical structure spanning an open space underneath it.[1] Arch can either support the load above it or perform a purely decorative role.[2] The arch dates back to fourth millennium BC, but became popular only after its adoption by the Romans in the 4th century BC.[3]

Arch-like structures can be horizontal, like an arch dam that withstands the horizontal hydrostatic pressure load.[4] Arches are used as supports for many types of vaults, with the barrel vault in particular being a continuous arch.[5]

Basic concepts

Terminology

A true arch is a load-bearing arc with elements held together by compression.[2] In much of the world introduction of the true arch was a result of European influence.[3] The term false arch has few meanings. It is usually used to designate an arch that has no structural purpose, like a proscenium arch in theaters used to frame the performance for the spectators, but is also applied to corbelled and triangular arches that are not based on compression.[6][7]

Masonry arch elements

A typical true masonry arch consists of the following elements:[8][9][10]

  1. Keystone, the top block in an arch. Portion of the arch around the keystone (including the keystone itself), with no precisely defined boundary, is called a crown
  2. Voussoir (a wedge-like construction block). A rowlock arch is formed by multiple concentric layers of voussoirs.[11]
  3. Extrados (external surface of the arch)
  4. Impost is block at the base of the arch (the voussoir immediately above the impost is a springer). The tops of imposts define the springing level. A portion of the arch between the springing level and the crown (centered around the 45° angle[12]) is called a haunch. If the arch resides on top of a column, the impost is formed by an abacus or its thicker version, dosseret.[13]
  5. Intrados (underside of the arch, also known as a soffit[2])
  6. Rise (height of the arc, distance from the springing level to the crown)
  7. Clear span
  8. Abutment[14] The triangular-shaped portion of the wall between the extrados and the horizontal division above is called spandrel.[15]

A (left or right) half-segment of an arch is called an arc, the overall line of an arch is arcature[16] (this term is also used for an arcade).[17] Archivolt is the exposed (front-facing) part of the arch, sometimes decorated (occasionally also used to designate the intrados).[18] If the sides of voussoir blocks are not straight, but include angles and curves for interlocking, the arch is called "joggled".[19]

Arch action

Arch (A) action diagram in comparison with a beam (B)

A true arch, due to its rise, resolves the vertical loads into horizontal and vertical reactions at the ends, a so called arch action. The vertical load produces a positive bending moment in the arch, while the inward-directed horizontal reaction from the spandrel/abutment provides a counterbalancing negative moment. As a result, the bending moment in any segment of the arch is much smaller than in a beam with the equivalent load and span.[20] The diagram on the right shows the difference between loaded arch and beam. Elements of the arch are mostly subject to compression (A), while in the beam a bending moment is present, with compression at the top and tension at the bottom (B).

Funicular shapes

Analogy between an arch and a hanging chain and comparison to the dome of Saint Peter's Basilica in Rome (Giovanni Poleni, 1748)

When evaluated from the perspective of an amount of material required to support a given load, the best solid structures are compression-only; with the flexible materials, the same is true for tension-only designs. There is a fundamental symmetry in nature between solid compression-only and flexible tension-only arrangements, noticed by Robert Hooke in 1676: "As hangs the flexible line, so but inverted will stand the rigid arch", thus the study (and terminology) of arch shapes is inextricably linked to the study of hanging chains, the corresponding curves are called funicular. Just like the shape of a hanging chain will vary depending on the weights attached to it, the shape of an ideal (compression-only) arch will depend on the distribution of the load. [21]

Arrangements

A sequence of arches can be grouped together forming an arcade. Romans perfected this form, as shown, for example, by arched structures of Pont du Gard.[22] In the interior of hall churches, arcades of separating arches were used to separate the nave of a church from the side aisle,[23] or two adjacent side aisles.[24]

Two-tiered arches, with two arches superimposed, were sometimes used in Islamic architecture, mostly for decorative purposes.[25]

An opening of the arch can be filled, creating a blind arch. Blind arches are frequently decorative, and were extensively used in Early Christian, Romanesque, and Islamic architecture.[26] Alternatively, the opening can be filled with smaller arches, producing a containing arch, common in Gothic and Romanesque architecture.[27] Multiple arches can be superimposed with an offset, creating an interlaced series of usually (with some exceptions) blind and decorative arches. Most likely of Islamic origin, the interlaced arcades were popular in Romanesque and Gothic architecture.[28] Rear-arch (also rere-arch) is the one that frames the internal side of an opening in the external wall.[29]

Structural

Structurally, the relieving arches (often blind or containing) can be used to take off load from some portions of the building (for example, to allow use of thinner exterior walls with larger window openings, or, like in Roman Pantheon, to redirect the weight of the upper structures to particular strong points).[27] Transverse arches, introduced in Carolingian architecture, are placed across the nave to compartmentalize the internal space into bays and support vaults.[30] Diaphragm arch similarly goes in the transverse direction, but carries a section of wall on top. It is used to support or divide sections of the high roof.[31] The strainer arches were built as an afterthought to prevent two adjacent supports from imploding due to miscalculation. Frequently they were made very decorative, with one of the best examples provided by the Wells Cathedral. Strainer arches can be "inverted" (upside-down) while remaining structural.[32][33] A counter-arch is built adjacent to another arch to oppose its horizontal action or help to stabilize it, for example, when constructing a flying buttress.[34]

The skew arch (also known as an oblique arch) is used when the arch needs to turn in the horizontal plane,[35] for example, when a bridge crosses the river at an angle different than 90°.

Shapes

Types of arches

The large variety of arch shapes (left) can mostly be classified into three broad categories: rounded, pointed, and parabolic.[36]

Rounded

"Round" semicircular arches were commonly used for ancient arches that were constructed of heavy masonry,[37] and were relied heavily on by the Roman builders since the 4th century BC. It is considered to be the most common arch form.[38]

A segmental arch, with a rounded shape that is less than a semicircle, is very old (the versions were cut in the rock in Ancient Egypt c. 2100 BC at Beni Hasan). Since then it was occasionally used in Greek temple and Islamic, got popular as window pediments during the Renaissance.[39]

A basket arch (also known as depressed arch, chop arch, three-centred arch, basket handle arch) consists of segments of three circles with origins at three different centers). Was used in late Gothic and Baroque architecture.[40][41]

A horseshoe arch (also known as keyhole arch) has a rounded shape that includes more than a semicircle, originates in Islamic architecture and was known in areas of Europe with Islamic influence (Spain, Southern France, Italy). Occasionally used in Gothics, it briefly enjoyed popularity as the entrance door treatment in the interwar England.[42]

Pointed

Pointed arches, 1 - equilateral with trefoil treatment, 2 - blunt, 3 - lancet, 4 - ogee, 5 - four-centred, 6 - curtain (inflexed), 7 - pointed horseshoe

A pointed arch consists of two ("two-centred arch"[43]) or more circle segments culminating in a point at the top. It originated in the Islamic architecture, arrived in Europe in the second half of the 11th century (Cluny Abbey)[44] and later became prominent in the Gothic architecture.[45] The advantages of a pointed arch over a semicircular one are flexible ratio of span to rise[46] and lower horizontal reaction at the base. This innovation allowed for taller and more closely spaced openings, which are typical of Gothic architecture.[47][48] Equilateral arch is the most common form of the pointed arch, with the centers of two circles forming the intrados coinciding with the springing points of the opposite segment. Together with the apex point, they form a equilateral triangle, thus the name.[49] If the centers of circles are farther apart, the arch becomes a narrower and sharper lancet arch that appeared in France in the Early Gothic architecture (Saint-Denis Abbey) and became prominent in England in the late 12th and early 13th centuries (Salisbury Cathedral).[50] If the centers are closer one to another, the result is a wider blunt arch.

The intrados of the cusped arch (also known as multifoil arch, polyfoil arch, polylobed arch, and scalloped arch) includes several independent circle segments in a scalloped arrangement. These primarily decorative arches are common in Islamic architecture and Northern European Late Gothic, can be found in Romanesque architecture.[51] A similar trefoil arch includes only three segments and sometimes has a rounded, not pointed, top. Common in Islamic architecture and Romanesque buildings influenced by it, it later became popular in the decorative motifs of the Late Gothic designs of Northern Europe.[52]

Each arc of an ogee arch consists of at least two circle segments (for a total of at least four), with the center of an upper circle being outside the extrados. After European appearance in the 13th century on the facade of the St Mark's Basilica, the arch became a fixture of the English Decorated style, French Flamboyant, Venetian, and other Late Gothic styles.[53] Ogee arch is also known as reversed curve arch, occasionally also called an inverted arch.[32] The top of an ogee arch sometimes projects beyond the wall, forming the so-called nodding ogee popular in 14th century England (pulpitum in Southwell Minster).[54]

Each arc of a four-centred arch is made of two circle segments with distinct centers; usually the radius used closer to the springing point is smaller with a more pronounced curvature. Common in Islamic architecture (Persian arch), and, with upper portion flattened almost to straight lines (Tudor arch[55]), in the English Perpendicular Gothic.[56]A keel arch is a variant of four-centred arch with haunches almost straight, resembling a section view of a capsized ship. Popular in Islamic architecture, it can be also found in Europe, occasionally with a small ogee element at the top,[57] so it is sometimes considered to be a variation of an ogee arch.[58]

Curtain arch (also known as inflexed arch) uses two (or more) drooping curves that join at the apex. Utilized as a dressing for windows and doors primarily in Saxony in the Late Gothic and early Renaissance buildings (late 15th to early 16th century), associated with Arnold von Westfalen.[59]

Parabolic

The popularity of the arches using segments of a circle is due to simplicity of layout and construction,[60] not their structural properties. Consequently, the architects historically used a variety of other curves in their designs: elliptical curves, hyperbolic cosine curves (including catenary), and parabolic curves. There are two reasons behind the selection of these curves:[61]

  1. they are still relatively easy to trace with common tools prior to construction;
  2. depending on a situation, they can have superior structural properties and/or appearance.

The hyperbolic curve is not easy to trace, but there are known cases of its use.[61] The non-circumferential curves look similar, and match at shallow profiles, so a catenary is often misclassified as a parabola[62] (per Galileo, "the [hanging] chain fits its parabola almost perfectly"[63]). González et al. provide an example of Palau Güell, where researchers do not agree on classification of the arches or claim the prominence of parabolic arches, while the measurements show that just two of the 23 arches designed by Gaudi are actually parabolic.[64]

Three parabolic-looking curves in particular are of significance to the arch design: parabola itself, catenary, and weighted catenary. The arches naturally use the inverted (upside-down) versions of these curves.

A parabola represents an ideal (all-compression) shape when the load is equally distributed along the span, while the weight of the arch itself is negligible. A catenary is the best solution for the case where an arch with uniform thickness carries just its own weight with no external load. The practical designs for bridges are somewhere in between, and thus use the curves that represent a compromise that combines both the catenary and the funicular curve for particular non-uniform distribution of load.[69] The practical free-standing arches are stronger and thus heavier at the bottom, so a weighted catenary curve is utilized for them. The same curve also fits well an application where a bridge consists of an arch with a roadway of packed dirt above it, as the dead load increases with a distance from the center.[70]

Other

Unlike regular arches, the flat arch (also known as jack arch, lintel arch, straight arch, plate-bande[71]) is not curved. Instead, the arch is flat in profile and can be used under the same circumstances as lintel. However, lintels are subject to bending stress, while the flat arches are true arches, composed of irregular voussoir shapes (the keystone is the only one of the symmetric wedge shape),[72] and that efficiently uses the compressive strength of the masonry in the same manner as a curved arch and thus requires a mass of masonry on both sides to absorb the considerable lateral thrust. Used in the Roman architecture to imitate the Greek lintels, Islamic architecture, European medieval and Renaissance architecture. The flat arch is still being used as a decorative pattern, primarily at the top of window openings.[72]

False arches

The corbel (also corbelled) arch, made of two corbels meeting in the middle of the span, is a true arch in a sense of being able to carry a load, but it is false in a structural sense, as its components are subject to bending stress. The typical profile not curved, but has triangular shape. Invented prior to the semicircular arch, the corbel arch was used already in the Egyptian and Mycenaean architecture in the 3rd and 2nd millennium BC.[73]

Like a corbel arch, the triangular arch is not a true arch in a structural sense. Its intrados is formed by two slabs leaning against each other.[7] Brick builders would call triangular any arch with straight inclined sides.[74] The design was common in Anglo-Saxon England until the late 11th century (St Mary Goslany).[7] Mayan corbel arches are sometimes called triangular due to their shape.[75]

Variations

Few modifications can be applied to multiple arch shapes.

If one impost is much higher than another, the arch (frequently pointed) is known as ramping arch, raking arch,[76] or rampant arch (from French: arc rampant).[77]

A central part of an arch can be raised on short vertical supports, creating a trefoil-like shouldered arch. The raised central part can vary all the way from a flat arch to ogee. Coming from the Islamic architecture, the shouldered arches were used to decorate openings in Europe from medieval times to Late Gothic architecture, became common in Iranian architecture from the 14th century, and were later adopted in the Ottoman Turkey.[78]

In a stilted arch (also surmounted[79]), the springing line is located above the imposts (on "stilts"). Known to Islamic architects by the 8th century, the technique was utilized to vertically align the apexes of arches of different dimensions in Romanesque and Gothic architecture.[80] In particular, stilting was useful for semicircular arches, where the ratio of the rise fixed at 12 of the span.

A wide arch with its rise less than 12 of the span (and thus the geometric circle of at least one segment is below the springing line) is called a surbased arch[81] (sometimes also a depressed arch[82]). A drop arch is either a basket handle arch[83] or a blunt arch.[84]

Hinged arches

Rossgraben bridge (Rüeggisberg) near Bern, Switzerland, showing the hinge at mid-span of this three-hinged arch.

The practical arch bridges are built either as a fixed arch, a two-hinged arch, or a three-hinged arch.[85] The fixed arch is most often used in reinforced concrete bridges and tunnels, which have short spans. Because it is subject to additional internal stress from thermal expansion and contraction, this kind of arch is statically indeterminate (the internal state is impossible to determine based on the external forces alone).[36]

The two-hinged arch is most often used to bridge long spans.[36] This kind of arch has pinned connections at its base. Unlike that of the fixed arch, the pinned base can rotate,[86] thus allowing the structure to move freely and compensate for the thermal expansion and contraction that changes in outdoor temperature cause. However, this can result in additional stresses, and therefore the two-hinged arch is also statically indeterminate, although not as much as the fixed arch.[36]

The three-hinged arch is not only hinged at its base, like the two-hinged arch, yet also at its apex. The additional apical connection allows the three-hinged arch to move in two opposite directions and compensate for any expansion and contraction. This kind of arch is thus not subject to additional stress from thermal change. Unlike the other two kinds of arch, the three-hinged arch is therefore statically determinate.[85] It is most often used for spans of medial length, such as those of roofs of large buildings. Another advantage of the three-hinged arch is that the reaction of the pinned bases is more predictable than the one for the fixed arch, allowing shallow, bearing-type foundations in spans of medial length. In the three-hinged arch "thermal expansion and contraction of the arch will cause vertical movements at the peak pin joint but will have no appreciable effect on the bases," which further simplifies foundational design.[36]

History

Bronze Age: ancient Near East

Arches in Babylon.

True arches, as opposed to corbel arches, were known by a number of civilizations in the ancient Near East including the Levant, but their use was infrequent and mostly confined to underground structures, such as drains where the problem of lateral thrust is greatly diminished.[87] An example of the latter would be the Nippur arch, built before 3800 BC,[88] and dated by H. V. Hilprecht (1859–1925) to even before 4000 BC.[89] Rare exceptions are an arched mudbrick home doorway dated to c.2000 BC from Tell Taya in Iraq[90] and two Bronze Age arched Canaanite city gates, one at Ashkelon (dated to c.1850 BC),[91] and one at Tel Dan (dated to c.1750 BC), both in modern-day Israel.[92][93] An Elamite tomb dated 1500 BC from Haft Teppe contains a parabolic vault which is considered one of the earliest evidences of arches in Iran.

Classical Persia and Greece

In ancient Persia, the Achaemenid Empire (550 BC–330 BC) built small barrel vaults (essentially a series of arches built together to form a hall) known as iwan, which became massive, monumental structures during the later Parthian Empire (247 BC–AD 224).[94][95][96] This architectural tradition was continued by the Sasanian Empire (224–651), which built the Taq Kasra at Ctesiphon in the 6th century AD, the largest free-standing vault until modern times.[97]

An early European example of a voussoir arch appears in the 4th century BC Greek Rhodes Footbridge.[98][99]

Ancient Rome

The ancient Romans learned the arch from the Etruscans, refined it and were the first builders in Europe to tap its full potential for above ground buildings:

The Romans were the first builders in Europe, perhaps the first in the world, to fully appreciate the advantages of the arch, the vault and the dome.[100]

Arch of Caracalla, a Roman triumphal arch in Tébessa, Algeria (2016)

Throughout the Roman empire, their engineers erected arch structures such as bridges, aqueducts, and gates. They also introduced the triumphal arch as a military monument. Vaults began to be used for roofing large interior spaces such as halls and temples, a function that was also assumed by domed structures from the 1st century BC onwards.

The segmental arch was first built by the Romans who realized that an arch in a bridge did not have to be a semicircle,[101][102] such as in Alconétar Bridge or Ponte San Lorenzo. They were also routinely used in house construction, as in Ostia Antica (see picture).

Ancient China

In ancient China, most architecture was wooden, including the few known arch bridges from literature and one artistic depiction in stone-carved relief.[103][104][105] Therefore, the only surviving examples of architecture from the Han dynasty (202 BC – 220 AD) are rammed earth defensive walls and towers, ceramic roof tiles from no longer existent wooden buildings,[106][107][108] stone gate towers,[109][110] and underground brick tombs that, although featuring vaults, domes, and archways, were built with the support of the earth and were not free-standing.[111][112]

Ancient bridges in comparison

The oldest stone-arch bridge in the world is the Arkadiko Bridge in Greece.

China's oldest surviving stone arch bridge is the Anji Bridge. Still in use, it was built between 595 CE and 605 CE during the Sui dynasty; it is the oldest open-spandrel segmental arch bridge in stone.[113][114]

The oldest surviving (in original state and still in use) stoned arch bridge from ancient Rome is Pons Fabricius in Rome, a closed-spandrel bridge constructed in 62 BCE.[115]

The ancient Romans had built open-spandrel bridges prior to the construction of the Anji Bridge. For example, Trajan's Bridge, built between 103 AD and 105 AD, had open spandrels, however these were built in wood on stone pillars, and none are still intact and/or in use.

In the modern era, construction of stone-arch bridges in China has far exceeded that of the former Roman-Empire territories: all of the 22 longest existing stone-arch bridges are in China.[116]

Gothic Europe

The first example of an early Gothic arch in Europe is in Sicily in the Greek fortifications of Gela. The semicircular arch was followed in Europe by the pointed Gothic arch or ogive, whose centreline more closely follows the forces of compression and which is therefore stronger. The semicircular arch can be flattened to make an elliptical arch, as in the Ponte Santa Trinita. Parabolic arches were introduced in construction by the Spanish architect Antoni Gaudí, who admired the structural system of the Gothic style, but for the buttresses, which he termed "architectural crutches". The first examples of the pointed arch in the European architecture are in Sicily and date back to the Arab-Norman period.

Horseshoe arch: Aksum and Syria

The horseshoe arch is based on the semicircular arch, but its lower ends are extended further round the circle until they start to converge. The first known built horseshoe arches are from the Kingdom of Aksum in modern-day Ethiopia and Eritrea, dating from ca. 3rd–4th century. This is around the same time as the earliest contemporary examples in Roman Syria, suggesting either an Aksumite or Syrian origin for the type.[117]

India

Vaulted roof of an early Harappan burial chamber has been noted from Rakhigarhi.[118] S.R Rao reports vaulted roof of a small chamber in a house from Lothal.[119] Barrel vaults were also used in the Late Harappan Cemetery H culture dated 1900 BC-1300 BC which formed the roof of the metal working furnace, the discovery was made by Vats in 1940 during excavation at Harappa.[120][121][122]

In India, Bhitargaon temple (450 AD) and Mahabodhi temple (7th century AD) built in by the Gupta dynasty are the earliest surviving examples of the use of voussoir arch vault system in India.[123] The earlier uses semicircular arch, while the later contains examples of both gothic style pointed arch and semicircular arches. Although introduced in the 5th century, arches didn't gain prominence in the Indian architecture until 12th century after Islamic conquest. The Gupta era arch vault system was later used extensively in Burmese Buddhist temples in Pyu and Bagan in 11th and 12th centuries.[124]

Corbel arch: pre-Columbian Mexico

This article does not deal with a different architectural element, the corbel arch. However, it is worthwhile mentioning that corbel arches were found in other parts of ancient Asia, Africa, Europe, and the Americas. In 2010, a robot discovered a long arch-roofed passageway underneath the Pyramid of Quetzalcoatl, which stands in the ancient city of Teotihuacan north of Mexico City, dated to around 200 AD.[125]

Construction

A series of parabolic arches on the Móra d'Ebre bridge, Catalonia, Spain (2005)

Since it is a pure compression form, the arch is useful because many building materials, including stone and unreinforced concrete, can resist compression, but are weak when tensile stress is applied to them (ref: similar to the AL-Karparo [8:04]).[126]

An arch is held in place by the weight of all of its members, making construction problematic. One answer is to build a frame (historically, of wood) which exactly follows the form of the underside of the arch. This is known as a centre or centring. Voussoirs are laid on it until the arch is complete and self-supporting. For an arch higher than head height, scaffolding would be required, so it could be combined with the arch support. Arches may fall when the frame is removed if design or construction has been faulty. The first attempt at the A85 bridge at Dalmally, Scotland suffered this fate, in the 1940s. The interior and lower line or curve of an arch is known as the intrados.

Old arches sometimes need reinforcement due to decay of the keystones, forming what is known as bald arch.

In reinforced concrete construction, the principle of the arch is used so as to benefit from the concrete's strength in resisting compressive stress. Where any other form of stress is raised, such as tensile or torsional stress, it has to be resisted by carefully placed reinforcement rods or fibres.[127]

See also

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