In
https://pixelfed.social/p/Splines/803615973439041638, we saw
#Arcade #Intercolumniation without
#Pedestal. Here we see it with pedestals. The previous post was missing
#dentils but they are included here.
Arches are made up of wedge-shaped blocks known as
#voussoir. The middle one at the top of the arch has a special name —
#keystone — and it is the stone that supports the most vulnerable part of the beam above and distributes its load to the adjacent blocks, which, in turn, do the same to the next lower block until the load is transferred to the
#impost above a
#pier.
When the arch does not include a pedestal, the arch opening is closer to the entablature, and there is no special decoration on the keystone. When there are pedestals, they add 6µ (864 units) to the total height, but the height of the opening goes up only by 5µ. So there is greater separation between the entablature and the top of the arch. In that case, there is a decoration on top of the arch to close the gap.
With pedestals, everything added for the arch has different measurement. Because of the increased height, the whole wall behind the columns is thicker — 2µ instead of 1.5µ when there is no pedestal. The pier is also wider, but its base molding is shorter. The impost profile is same, but it is wider because the pier is wider. The
#archivolt is also wider, almost reaching the column shaft.
#Scarlata's book
https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015031201190&view=1up&seq=47 has all the measurements. So, I won't repeat them here.
In this post as well as in the previous one, I showed only a single arch on a flat wall with two columns half buried in the wall. When there are multiple arches running along a curve, the wall, entablature, archivolt, impost, pier, and its base are flexible and bend along the curve, but the column and pedestal are rigid. Most
#CAD tools offer the option of flowing rigid bodies along a curve or curved surface — Just flow the columns and pedestals separately.