Stereotomy (Greek: στερεός (stereós) "solid" and τομή (tomē) "cut ") is the art and science of cutting three-dimensional solids into particular shapes. Typically this involves materials such as stone or wood which is cut to be assembled into complex structures (wall, vault, arch, etc.). In practice, the engineer makes a drawing of the intended stonework, showing where the joints in the face are to be located, and the stone cutter then details each block and cuts it to fit exactly with the others.

Stereotomy and descriptive geometry

Stereotomy is strongly associated with stonecutting and has a very long history. Descriptive geometry can be considered as an evolution of streotomy.

In technical drawing stereotomy is sometimes referred to as descriptive geometry, and "is concerned with two-dimensional representations of three dimensional objects. Plane projections and perspective drawings of solid figures are used to describe and analyze their properties for engineering and manufacturing purposes. Attention is paid to the properties of surfaces, including normal lines and tangent planes."

References

Sources

  • Calvo-López, José (2020). "Problems". Stereotomy. Vol. 4. Cham: Springer International Publishing. pp. 573–642. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-43218-8_12. ISBN 978-3-030-43217-1.

Descriptive Geometry As Applied to the Drawing of Fortification and

stereotomic definition Architecture Dictionary

Antique Illustration Mathematics And Geometry Stereometry Stock

Antique Illustration Mathematics And Geometry Stereometry Stock

Descriptive Geometry, As Applied To The Drawing Of Fortification And