Worthy additions, and thanks, though the lead-off image of the [pagoda?] before misty mountains is still the best. (What DO the Chinese call a pagoda-like structure, Sir Rakk?).
That stepped opening defies structural comprehension …
rakkity
Does give one pause when walking beneath it. The cantilevering upon cantilevering of those bricks seems to rely a lot on friction to maintain the support. But the 20th C Chinese re-built all the old stuff that wasn’t reliable (or that had fallen down). So one supposes that they have tested this arch. Maybe it has hidden components that aren’t visible.
The Chinese for pagoda? I’ll have to ask my friend Linhui (“Lin”) Sui.
el Kib
Worthy additions, and thanks, though the lead-off image of the [pagoda?] before misty mountains is still the best. (What DO the Chinese call a pagoda-like structure, Sir Rakk?).
That stepped opening defies structural comprehension …
rakkity
Does give one pause when walking beneath it. The cantilevering upon cantilevering of those bricks seems to rely a lot on friction to maintain the support. But the 20th C Chinese re-built all the old stuff that wasn’t reliable (or that had fallen down). So one supposes that they have tested this arch. Maybe it has hidden components that aren’t visible.
The Chinese for pagoda? I’ll have to ask my friend Linhui (“Lin”) Sui.