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41 comble à la Mansart
Dictionnaire d'ingénierie, d'architecture et de construction > comble à la Mansart
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42 comble brisé
Architecture française et le dictionnaire de construction > comble brisé
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43 comble à la Mansart
Architecture française et le dictionnaire de construction > comble à la Mansart
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44 toit brisé en pavillon
Architecture française et le dictionnaire de construction > toit brisé en pavillon
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45 toit en bâtière brisée
Architecture française et le dictionnaire de construction > toit en bâtière brisée
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46 Mansart, Nicolas François
SUBJECT AREA: Architecture and building[br]b. 23 January 1598 Paris, Franced. 23 September 1666 Paris, France[br]French architect believed by many historians to be the greatest French architect of all time.[br]Mansart was a classical architect who designed in High Renaissance style in France. Chief architect to Louis XIII, he was responsible for a number of fine châteaux and hôtels such as the Château de Maisons (1642–51) near Paris and the Hôtel Carnavalet (1660) in Paris. He was also the architect of the magnificent Paris church of Val de Grâce (begun in 1645).The mansard roof, which has two different slopes of pitch, one steeper than the other, was named after Mansart (with a small change of spelling for euphony). It was a type of roof that was very popular in France from the early seventeenth century onwards and was revived under Napoleon III in the nineteenth century. However, although Mansart popularized this style of roof, he did not invent it; indeed, it was used in earlier works by both Pierre Lescot and Jacques Lemercier.[br]Further ReadingR.Blomfield, 1911, A History of French Architecture, Vol II, Bell (the standard work). A.Braham and P.Smith, 1974, François Mansart, Zwemmer.A.Blunt, 1941, François Mansart and the Origins of French Classical Architecture, The War burg Institute.DYBiographical history of technology > Mansart, Nicolas François
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47 Mansart
used in: - tipi çatı mansard roof, mansard. -
48 mansarda
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49 toit en mansarde
mcurb roof, Mansard roofDictionnaire d'ingénierie, d'architecture et de construction > toit en mansarde
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50 Mansarddach
Mansarddach n mansard roof, kerb roofDeutsch-Englisch Fachwörterbuch Architektur und Bauwesen > Mansarddach
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51 mansarda
• French roof• mansard roof -
52 mansardikatto
building / construction industry• curb roofbuilding / construction industry• mansard roof -
53 Mansardendach
nArchitektur & Tragwerksplanung, Holztragwerk gambrel roof, mansard roof -
54 kırık çatı
curb roof, mansard roof -
55 мансардные стропила с раскосами
Construction: mansard roof with slanted strutsУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > мансардные стропила с раскосами
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56 односкатная мансардная крыша
Construction: lean-to mansard roofУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > односкатная мансардная крыша
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57 стропильная ферма мансарды
Construction: mansard roof trussУниверсальный русско-английский словарь > стропильная ферма мансарды
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58 gebrochenes Dach
n < bau> ■ mansard roof -
59 Mansarddach
n < bau> ■ mansard roof -
60 Mansardendach
См. также в других словарях:
Mansard roof — redirects here. For the Vampire Weekend song, see Mansard Roof (song). A mansard roof on the Château de Dampierre (1675–1683), by Jules Hardouin Mansart, great nephew of François Mansart. A mansard or mansard roof (also called a French roof) is a … Wikipedia
mansard roof — mansard UK [ˈmænsɑː(r)d] / US [ˈmænˌsɑrd] or mansard roof UK / US noun [countable] Word forms mansard : singular mansard plural mansards Word forms mansard roof : singular mansard roof plural mansard roofs a roof that slopes at a steeper angle at … English dictionary
Mansard roof — Man sard roof [So called from its inventor, Fran[,c]ois Mansard, or Mansart, a distinguished French architect, who died in 1666.] (Arch.) A hipped curb roof; that is, a roof having on all sides two slopes, the lower one being steeper than the… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
mansard (roof) — or mansard [man′särd] n. 〚Fr mansarde, after F. Mansard (1598 1666), Fr architect, who revived the use of such roofs〛 a roof with two slopes on each of the four sides, the lower steeper than the upper * * * … Universalium
mansard (roof) — or mansard [man′särd] n. [Fr mansarde, after F. Mansard (1598 1666), Fr architect, who revived the use of such roofs] a roof with two slopes on each of the four sides, the lower steeper than the upper … English World dictionary
mansard (roof) — or mansard [man′särd] n. [Fr mansarde, after F. Mansard (1598 1666), Fr architect, who revived the use of such roofs] a roof with two slopes on each of the four sides, the lower steeper than the upper … English World dictionary
mansard-roof — /manˈsärd roof/ noun A roof having its angle divided to slope more steeply in the lower part than in the upper (also manˈsard) ORIGIN: François Mansard or Mansart (1598–1666), French architect … Useful english dictionary
Mansard Roof (song) — Mansard Roof Single by Vampire Weekend from the album Vampire Weekend Released … Wikipedia
mansard roof — noun a hip roof having two slopes on each side • Syn: ↑mansard • Derivationally related forms: ↑mansard (for: ↑mansard) • Hypernyms: ↑curb roof … Useful english dictionary
mansard roof — /ˈmænsad ruf/ (say mansahd roohf), / səd/ (say suhd) noun a roof having two pitches, the upper slopes being flatter than the lower ones, usually with rooms in the roof space having dormer windows. Also, mansard. {named after François Mansart,… …
mansard roof — noun a) A roof having two slopes on each side, the lower one having a steeper pitch than the upper; this increases the volume of the enclosed space. b) A steeper roof that terminates into a flat roof at its high point … Wiktionary