Dictionary Definition
buttress n : a support usually of stone or brick;
supports the wall of a building [syn: buttressing]
Verb
1 reinforce with a buttress; "Buttress the
church"
2 make stronger or defensible; "buttress your
thesis"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Derived terms
Synonyms
Translations
brick or stone structure built against another
structure to support it
- Dutch: stut, steun
- German: Stützpfeiler, Strebepfeiler
- Italian: contrafforte, contrafforti
- Russian: контрфорс
anything that serves to support something
Verb
- To support something with, or as if with a buttress.
- To support something or someone by supplying evidence; to corroborate or substantiate.
Translations
support something with, or as if with a buttress
- Dutch: stutten, ondersteunen
- German: stützen, verstärken
support something or someone by supplying
evidence
- Dutch: ondersteunen, onderbouwen
- German: unterstützen
Translations to be checked
Extensive Definition
A buttress is an architectural structure
built against (a counterfort) or projecting from a wall which serves to support or
reinforce the wall. Buttresses are fairly common on more ancient
buildings, especially in Germany, as a means
of providing support to act against the lateral (sideways) forces arising out of the roof structures that lack adequate
bracing.
The word buttress, in a more general sense, means
to support; one might buttress another person's arguments, for
instance. By visual analogy, that which looks like a buttress may
be called so; a projecting tree root at the base of the trunk, for
example, may be referred to as a buttress.
In architectural terms, there are at least five
distinct types of buttress:
- Clasping buttresses support two walls as they meet at a corner by making some length of both walls at the corner thicker than the remainder of the wall.
- Angle buttresses, like clasping buttresses, support walls at the corner by building each wall out beyond the corner, so that in plan the corner in fact is a cross shape.
- Flying buttresses may be thought of as half- or semi-arches; the elevated end of the arch supports the wall and the lower end of the arch is mounted on foundations, or on pillars or other flying buttresses. Flying buttresses are especially common in medieval cathedral design.
- Set-back buttresses support walls near a corner but set back from it.
- Diagonal buttresses support walls at corners but are built diagonally out of the corner of the wall, so forming a 135° angle between the buttress and each wall.
In the two pictures of the Palace
of Westminster to the right, the top image shows a buttress
serving two functions; it buttresses the lower wall as an ordinary
buttress; supports a flying buttress (only the top diagonal of
which can be seen) which in turn supports the inset, higher of the
two walls. The lower image shows no less than four different
buttress designs: the two featured in the top image; diagonal
buttresses around the base of the statue's plinth; a plain buttress
to the far right of the picture.
Flying
buttresses deserve additional mention for the part they played
in enabling Gothic
cathedrals to be
developed into massive and splendidly airy structures. The three
elements key to the move from the older, smaller and thicker walled
Romanesque
architecture were pointed arches, ribbed
vaulted roofs and flying buttresses. These worked together to
enable the construction of roofs having widths and weights greater
than could be contemplated using hammer-beam
roof constructions. Ribbed vaulted roofs are a form of arch
extended across the floor-space to be roofed, subdivided by ribs
(for instance from the four supporting pillars of a roof section)
and coming together at a point, rather than continuing in a smooth
semicircle as would a plain arch. Such roofs exert force down, but
also out, laterally, away from their centre. These forces act on
the top of the walls supporting the roof, pushing them apart; the
flying buttress' design provides for an equal and opposite force to
be imposed on the wall, thus keeping the wall in balance. This,
firstly, enables the vaulted roof and, secondly, by externalising
some of the structural elements of the wall, allows the wall so
supported to be thinner, which in turn enables the development of
large arched window sections to let in light and be filled by
stained
glass.
The pier section of a flying buttresses - that
part which rises vertically from the ground (or other support) - is
often taller than the flying end of the buttress. The additional
height provides a deadweight pressing down on the pier, the
function of which is to keep the line of force being opposed by the
buttress within the line of the pier. The lateral force exerted by
the roof travels down through the arched section of the buttress,
and into the pier. Without the additional weight of the over-height
pier, the line of force would exit the pier at some point way above
the ground; if it did so, the pier would be unable to resist the
force and so would collapse at that point. Combining the two force
vectors, both from the roof and from the deadweight, keeps the line
of force within the masonry of the pier.
In more modern buildings, better internal bracing
of structures arising out of a more well-developed understanding of
structural engineering diminishes the use of buttresses; however
they are by no means obsolete, and will continue to be found as
integral parts of certain structures, not least in certain designs
of free standing curtain and retaining walls.
buttress in Belarusian (Tarashkevitsa):
Контрфорс
buttress in Catalan: Contrafort
buttress in German: Strebewerk
buttress in Estonian: Tugipiilar
buttress in Spanish: Contrafuerte
buttress in Basque: Hormabular
buttress in French: Contrefort
buttress in Galician: Contraforte
buttress in Italian: Contrafforte
buttress in Lithuanian: Kontraforsas
buttress in Dutch: Steunbeer
buttress in Polish: System przyporowy
buttress in Portuguese: Contraforte
buttress in Russian: Контрфорс
(архитектура)
buttress in Simple English: Buttress
buttress in Slovak: Rizalit
buttress in Swedish: Strävpelare
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abutment, advocate, affirm, afford support, alpenstock, arc-boutant,
arm, athletic supporter,
attest, authenticate, back, back up, backbone, backing, bandeau, bank, beam, bear, bear out, bear up, bearer, beef up, bolster, bolster up, bra, brace, brace up, bracer, bracket, brassiere, breakwater, bulwark, buoy up, buttress pier,
buttressing,
cane, carrier, carry, case harden, certify, cervix, circumstantiate,
column, confirm, corroborate, corset, cradle, crook, crutch, cushion, document, embankment, finance, flying buttress,
fortify, foundation
garment, fulcrum,
fund, gird, girdle, give support, groin, guy, guywire, hanging buttress,
harden, hold, hold up, invigorate, jetty, jock, jockstrap, jutty, keep, keep afloat, keep up, lend
support, mainstay,
maintain, maintainer, mast, mole, neck, nerve, pier, pier buttress, pillow, probate, prop, prop up, prove, rampart, ratify, refresh, reinforce, reinforcement, reinforcer, reinvigorate, rest, resting place, restrengthen, retaining
wall, rigging, seawall, shore, shore up, shoulder, shroud, spine, sprit, staff, standing rigging, stave, stay, steel, stick, stiffen, stiffener, strengthen, strengthener, subsidize, substantiate, subvention, subventionize, support, supporter, sustain, sustainer, temper, toughen, underbrace, undergird, underlie, underpin, underpinning, underset, upbear, uphold, upholder, upkeep, validate, verify, walking stick, warrant