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The Original Dome

The Dome of Discovery was built for the 1951 Festival of Britain on London's South Bank. It was built and erected by the Staffordshire engineering firm of Horseley Bridge & Thomas Piggott of Tipton, now in the West Midlands. At its base was a giant steel ring girder made from 24 pieces welded together, with a diameter of 342 feet, supported on steel tubular struts, total diameter 365 feet. The structure was built up in smaller and smaller intersecting circles supported on triangles of aluminium ribs. The final height was nearly 100 feet.

Photo of the Dome of Discovery under construction.

©  Staffordshire and Stoke on Trent Archive Service

In the days before computers, all the calculations had to be worked out using 7-figure logarithms, using the theory of spherical trigonometry, to the utmost accuracy.

Staffordshire Record Office holds the original blue-prints of the design, and various photograph albums showing the progress of the building work, as well as other constructions by the company including bridges and power stations, both in Britain and abroad.

Staffordshire Record Office: D1288; D5115

Last Modified: 13/09/2007 10:33:48
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