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Wood River Dome

The Wood River dome described below is one of two domes built by the Union Tank Car Company in 1958. The other dome is located in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Wood River Illinois, is just to the east of Alton, across the Mississippi River to the north of Saint Louis. The following gives you a one day excursion route from Saint Louis to the Kahokia Mounds, the geodesic dome at Wood River, and the River Road north of Alton, Illinois.

The next time you're in Saint Louis, have breakfast at the Saint Louis Arches, then cross the River into East Saint Louis, Illinois, on Interstate 55/70. Exit from I55 at exit 6 or 9 and visit the Kahokia Mounds in Collinsville. After lunch, take State Highway 111 or Highway 255 north to Wood River. At Highway 143, turn west toward the Mississippi River.

At the railway tracks, take Old Saint Louis Road north one half mile. The dome is at 435 Old Saint Louis Road on the left (toward the River). On the east side of the street is Conley Avenue, also spelled Connelly Lane. The dome property covers 36 acres.

Directions from Alton.

Take East Broadway Avenue east from Alton. This is also Highway 140. When Highway 140 turns left at Washington Street, you continue east on East Broadway. East Broadway turns into West Saint Louis Avenue at Route 3. Cross Route 3, continue east on West Saint Louis Avenue. West Saint Louis Avenue forks at a railway crossing. Take the right fork on East Alton Avenue. Head south on East Alton Avenue. East Alton Avenue turns into Old Saint Louis Road at the border of Wood River. The dome is at 435 Old Saint Louis Road, a little more than a half mile south of the fork. If you come to Highway 143, you have passed the dome.

Best view of the dome from a distance is from Route 3. Route 3 runs north and south, parallel to Old Saint Louis Road. You can see the dome clearly across a soy bean field in the afternoon sun.

Originally built by the Union Tank Car company, the dome is now owned by:

      Saint Louis Refrigerator Company
      Dome Railway Service Division
      435 Old Saint Louis Road
      Wood River, Illinois 62095

The struts in the dome are 11 foot, telescoping, steel tubes, reinforced by a suspended truss facing. Unfortunately the owner of the repair shed hasn't maintained the roof properly. They require a welder to repair leaks in the metal roof. Other than that, the 50 year old dome is problem free and provides adequate space for the workers. The echo inside the metal dome roof provides a cacaphony of sound. Hammer sounds are echoed off the 88.5 foot ceiling across the 354 foot floor. The wind force through the doors is enormous. Birds fly in and out of the open doors and fly around in the vaulted space. There were about 20 railway cars in the shed being repaired, when I visited the dome.

If you look closely at the great circles formed by the struts, you can notice that the great circles are not straight lines. You can tell that in 1958, they didn't have computers to measure the struts exactly. They had to compensate for their errors in computation, as they were building the dome, rather than tearing it down and starting over.

From the outside, you can see that the dome is shaped like 5 arches next to the ground. These arches are great circles stretching 72 degrees around the dome. Each end of the arch is 63 degrees from the top of the dome. The center of the arch is 58 degrees from the top of the dome. This mid-point of the arch is related to the golden proportion that the Greeks used in their construction. The golden proportion is two times the cosine of 36 degrees, or the square root of 5 plus one divided by two. The arc tangent of the golden proportion is 58 degrees.

In a 1/3 dome, the height of the dome is half of the radius. Thus the tangent of the height over the radius is 1/2 at 63 degrees from the top. The arc cotangent of 1/2 is 63 degrees.

Here are the summary statistics for the Wood River dome.


Class I Icosahedron  Frequency 20  Radius 198.000000  Diameter 396.000000

Minimum length 9.099314
Maximum length 13.089828   1.438551 times longer
Average length 11.861884   Stdev 0.890415
Struts per face      630
Total  faces          20
Struts per sphere  12600
Length count   110


There are 110 different strut lengths in this dome.

Notice that the diameter of the dome is 396 feet, not 354 feet. This is because the diameter at 63 degrees from the top of the dome is smaller than the diameter at the equator. The diameter at the equator for this dome is 396 feet, rounded to the nearest foot.

The following image looks similar to the Wood River dome.

c1i20.png

c1i20.png

This image shows you 3 of the 5 great circle arches at ground level.


After visiting, the dome, follow Highway 143 north to Alton. Highway 143 bends north along the River. The River Road becomes Highway 100 north of the Alton bridge and follows a scenic route along the River. After this scenic drive, you may return to Saint Louis across the Alton bridge on US Highway 67.

You will notice a very fertile flood plain between the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. The corn stalks are very tall in those fields. You can buy fresh vegetables and home made honey at roadside stands on your way back to Saint Louis.