Have you ever looked at …?
The pyramids in St Leonard’s
After my whimsical departure into mathematics last issue,
this time we are returning to looking at everyday aspects of St Leonard’s. So, have you noticed any pyramids around the
area?
No, I don’t mean the swimming pool complex, which has some
tiles with Egyptian themes (but hardly a pyramid in sight), nor do I mean a
well-known brand of tea-bag, nor the formation adopted by some football teams. I mean objects whose shape is a pyramid,
which means that they have faces which are triangular, or roughly so, and they converge
to a point at the top. Just like an
Egyptian pyramid. Those have a square
base; tea-bags have a triangular base.
The shape of the base doesn’t matter – it is those triangles and the
point which are important.
Pyramid on top of a brick pillar, St Leonard's Road |
Pyramid as part of a shaped granite gatepost, St Leonard's Road |
Go a little further, and you’ll find granite posts with
shaped tops, those which include a vertical step interrupting the triangular
shape, and some which smooth the shape with curves. Archaeologists link the familiar pyramids
outside Cairo with some older Egyptian “stepped pyramids” (whose name suggests
the shape). There are examples of such
stepped pyramids around our streets, but I suspect that they are probably not
so old that they would be of interest to many archaeologists.
The Smeall Building, St Luke's campus, University of Exeter |
There are more pyramids to be found than on our
gateposts. Exeter’s street rubbish bins
are topped with a pyramid roof. The
steeple of St Leonard’s church is a pyramid.
Admittedly, it has bits sticking out, but essentially it is a pyramid
with four very tall triangles on a square base.
Around the main steeple, and part-way along the roof of the church,
there are some more pyramids. Buildings
of other kinds are topped with pyramid shaped roof, because, like the gateposts
we started with, a pyramid looks nice and its design sheds water. There is a fine example at the junction of
Barnfield Hill and Spicer Road. On the
Quay, near Colleton Hill, a modern building is topped with a small turret and a
pyramid. County Hall’s clock-tower has a
pyramid for its tiled roof, and there are yet more on the St Luke’s campus, and
at the Mardon Centre. During the summer,
when I was looking out for examples of local pyramids, there were several
gazebos visible in local gardens, and their roofs are made of triangles meeting
at a point.
Just outside the neighbourhood, the uprights of the
suspension bridge over the Exe at the Quay are topped with octahedral shapes –
which are two pyramids, one pointing up, one pointing down, with eight
triangles.
On top of the clock tower of the residences, St Luke's campus, University of Exeter |
Not all the local pyramids are on square bases. I have noticed some with a six-sided base,
and others with an eight-sided base. The
more sides, the closer the base comes to looking like – and fitting onto – circular foundations.
The gateposts of several houses in St Leonard’s road have
been carved from granite, with a pyramid top and a slight collar around the
upright. It would be interesting to know
the reason why this shape was adopted.
Being such a hard stone, it seems unlikely that the collar is there to
prevent erosion.
The Mardon Centre, Wonford Road, see across Exeter School's playing field |
The late Osbert Lancaster wrote a short guide to the history
of architecture. Thinking of the
original pyramids, he commented: “The architecture of ancient Egypt has much to
commend it – size, dignity and durability – but nevertheless it must be
admitted that it is a trifle monotonous.”
I hope that you do not find a walk in search of local pyramids even a
trifle monotonous. (Next summer,
perhaps, with global warming, there will be camels to carry local visitors on
tours of our pyramids!)
(My thanks to Ellie, Abbie, James and Tina for their help in spotting pyramids around St Leonard's)
(Published in the November-December 2015 issue of Neighbourhood News)
(My thanks to Ellie, Abbie, James and Tina for their help in spotting pyramids around St Leonard's)
(Published in the November-December 2015 issue of Neighbourhood News)