sábado, 28 de julio de 2012

TOWER OF PISA



TOWER OF PISA



The Tower of Pisa Leaning Tower of Pisa or (Italian: Torre pendente di Pissa) is the steeple of the Cathedral of Pisa. It was built to stand vertically but began leaning as soon as construction began in August 1173. The tower height is 55.7 to 55.8 meters from the base, its weight is estimated at 14,700 tons and the inclination of about 4 ° extending 3.9 m from the vertical. The tower has 8 levels: a base of arches with 15 columns, 6 levels with an external colonnade topped by a belfry. The internal staircase has 294 spiral steps. The tower is located in Pisa, a town in the Italian region of Tuscany and is the capital of the homonymous province.



The Italian government asked for help on February 27, 1964 to prevent its collapse, and January 7, 1990 was closed to the public as a safety measure. In May 2008, after the removal of another 70 metric tons of earth, engineers announced that Tower had been stabilized so that it had stopped moving for the first time in its history. He indicated it would be stable for at about 200 years. He turned to allow entry to the public on June 16, 2001, after completing 10 years of work.


The construction of the Tower of Pisa was developed in three stages over a period of 177 years. The construction of the first floor of marble began August 8, 1173, in a period of military success and prosperity. The first floor is surrounded by pillars with classical capitals and arches.

After the third floor was built in 1178, the tower leaned to the north, due to a weak foundation (three meters) in an unstable subsoil. The design of this tower was imperfect from the start and construction stopped for a century because to wars between Pisans and the neighboring states. This period allowed the soil to settle, otherwise the tower would have collapsed.


El 27 de febrero de 1964, el gobierno de Italia pidió ayuda para prevenir la caída de la torre. Un conjunto de ingenieros, matemáticos e historiadores se asignó al proyecto y debatieron sobre los métodos de estabilización en las Islas Azores. Tras dos décadas de trabajo, la torre fue cerrada al público en enero de 1990.

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