List of octagonal buildings and structures
Octagon buildings and structures are characterized by an octagonal plan form, whether a perfect geometric octagon or a regular eight-sided polygon with approximately equal sides.
The oldest known octagon-shaped building[citation needed] is the Tower of the Winds in Athens, Greece, which was constructed circa 300 B.C. Octagon houses were popularized in the United States in the mid-19th century and there are too many to list here, see instead List of octagon houses. There are also octagonal houses built in other times and cultures.
Below is a list of octagonal buildings and structures worldwide, excluding houses and windmills.
Australia
[edit]- The office pods of Callam Offices in Canberra
- Chinaman's Hat an octagonal gazebo-like structure in the South Channel of Port Phillip Bay
- The Octagon Theatre at the University of Western Australia.
- The old site of Hotel Saville in South Yarra, Melbourne, now unofficially referred to as The Blocktagon, which was renovated into a residential dwelling made up of six octagonal apartments during the eleventh season of reality show The Block.
- Nauru House 80 Collins Street, Melbourne
- Sancta Sophia College within The University of Sydney. Referred to as the octagon or informally ‘octa’
Canada
[edit]At least 19 historic octagon houses are known to exist in Canada distributed across 4 eastern provinces.[1] For a list of these houses, See: List of octagon houses. In Canada, the octagon house craze also engendered an octagonal deadhouse phenomenon. This included octagonal deadhouses, pre-burial edifices, built in the mid to late 1800s along Yonge Street in south-central Ontario, from just north of Toronto to Aurora.
- Bastion Nanaimo, British Columbia
- Chapel at Dundurn, Hamilton, Ontario
- Miscou Island Lighthouse – strategic Baie des Chaleurs octagonal colonial lighthouse
- Huron County Gaol – distinctive octagonal jail design, 1839–41
- Pachena Point Light on Vancouver Island, British Columbia
- Speedside United Church, in Centre Wellington, Ontario
China
[edit]- Liaodi Pagoda, China (1000s)
- Lingxiao Pagoda, China (860)
- Also many other pagodas
Egypt
[edit]Ethiopia
[edit]Germany
[edit]- Palatine Chapel in Aachen, built c. 972
- Dragon House, 1870 garden folly, Sanssouci Park, Potsdam, Germany
- Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, built 1961
Greece
[edit]- Tower of the Winds, Athens, Greece
Hungary
[edit]- Rumbach Street synagogue, Budapest
India
[edit]- Satyagnana Sabha, Vadalur, Vadalur, Tamil Nadu
Iran
[edit]Palestine
[edit]- Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem. 687-691 CE
- Chapel of the Ascension, Jerusalem c. 382 CE by Saint Helena; original octagonal shrine has been reconstructed multiple times.
Italy
[edit]- Octagonal Hall, Baths of Diocletian (300), Rome
- Lateran Baptistery (440), Rome
- The Baptistery (5th century), Albenga
- Baptistery of San Giovanni, Florence (1059)
- The Battistero or Baptistery of Parma (1196)
- Basilica of San Vitale, Ravenna (547)
- Castel del Monte (Apulia), Andria (BT) (1240s)
- Church of St. Giacomo, Vicovaro (1400s)
- Tribuna of the Uffizi, Florence (1584)
Japan
[edit]- Yumedono at Hōryū-ji, Ikaruga (739)
- Octagonal Hall of Eisan-ji, Gojō (760-764)
- Hokuendō of Kōfuku-ji, Nara (1210)
- Saiendō of Hōryū-ji, Ikaruga (1250)
- Main Hall of Keikyuin of Kōryū-ji, Kyoto (1251)
- Three-Story Pagoda of Anraku-ji, Ueda (1290s)
- Aizendō of Tōfuku-ji, Kyoto (1333-92)
- Main Hall of Busshō-ji, Mito (1585)
- Nanendō of Kōfuku-ji, Nara (1789)
- Nippon Budokan, Tokyo (1964)
- Pagoda of Genjo Sanzoin Complex in Yakushi-ji, Nara (1991)
- Sugamo Ohdai Kannondō in Taisho University, Tokyo (2013)
New Zealand
[edit]- The Octagon, the former Trinity Congregational Church in Christchurch, New Zealand
Norway
[edit]- Ankenes Church
- Bardu Church
- Buvik Church
- Dolstad Church, mixed octagonal-cruciform
- Klæbu Church
- Røssvoll Church
- Støren Church
- Trinity Church (Oslo), octagonal-cruciform combined
- Vinje Church (Hemne)
Portugal
[edit]- Convent of Christ (Tomar, Portugal), 12th-15th Century. The adjacent chapel is only one of two octagonal chapels in the world. The other is in Jerusalem.
- Charola, Portuguese Info on the Chapel of the Convent of Christ.
Singapore
[edit]- Lau Pa Sat, a dining hall and market
Spain
[edit]- Alcazar of Jerez de la Frontera has an Octagonal Tower, in Almohad style
- El Micalet is the bell tower of Valencia Cathedral.
Sri Lanka
[edit]Sweden
[edit]- Hedvig Eleonora Church, Stockholm (1737)
United Kingdom
[edit]- Abbot's Kitchen, Glastonbury
- Abbot's Kitchen, Oxford
- Avenue Methodist Church in Sale, Greater Manchester
- Dutch Cottage, Rayleigh, Essex
- Eighteenth century replicas of the Athenian Tower of the Winds in the ornamental gardens of the following stately homes:
- Naze tower, Walton on the Naze
- Octagon, Birmingham the world's tallest octagonal residential skyscraper currently under construction.
- Octagonal chapter houses at the following cathedrals:[2]
- Octagon Centre, Sheffield
- Octagonal lantern tower, Ely Cathedral, Ely
- Octagon Chapel, Norwich
- Octagon Temple at Cliveden
- Dreghorn & Springside Parish Church
- St James Church, Teignmouth
- Great Pagoda, Kew Gardens, London
- Storm Tower at Compass Point, Bude, Cornwall
- St. John’s Methodist Church, Arbroath
- United Reformed Church in Cheadle Hulme
- The main tower of Hadlow Castle, Kent
- The Butter Market, Barnard Castle, County Durham
- Hertford College's Middle Common Room, Oxford
- Octagonal Tower, Cardiff Castle, Cardiff, built by Robert Beauchamp 1425
- Octagonal drawing room, Castell Coch, Tongwynlais, Cardiff, built by William Burges for John Crichton-Stuart, 3rd Marquess of Bute, 1870s
- All seven towers of Caernarfon Castle, Caernarfon, built by James of St George for Edward I, late thirteenth century
- Porth-y-Tŵr, St Davids, Wales, thirteenth century
United States
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Kline, Robert V. "Inventory of Older Octagon, Hexagon, and Round Houses". rvkline. Retrieved November 2, 2010.
- ^ Ousby, Ian, Blue Guide: England, 11th ed. 1995, various pages, London: A & C Black ISBN 0-7136-3874-5; New York: WW Norton ISBN 0-393-31340-9