Structural efficiency reduces to minimizing surface area S for a given enclosed volume V. The isoperimetric inequality states that the sphere uniquely attains this minimum; for radius r, S/V= 3/r (equal to 3 only at unit radius). Perfect spheres cannot be assembled from finitely many flat parts at finite precision. Geodesic domes resolve this by approximating the sphere with triangulated flat panels while maintaining structural rigidity. Since material scales with surface area in thin shells and highly subdivided space frames (up to bounded connection overhead), and since geodesic tessellations converge to the sphere’s minimal surface while remaining buildable, geodesic domes are asymptotically optimal among buildable enclosures: for any ε > 0, there exists a frequency ν with |S(Pν)−Ssphere|< ε.
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James A. Oliver (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68d461c231b076d99fa610af — DOI: https://doi.org/10.31224/5402
James A. Oliver
American Museum of Natural History
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