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Gateway Arch - St. Louis - Missouri (17275578342)

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The Gateway Arch is a 630-foot (192 m) monument in St. Louis in the U.S. state of Missouri. Clad in stainless steel and built in the form of an inverted, weighted catenary arch, it is the world's tallest arch, the tallest monument in the Western Hemisphere, and Missouri's tallest accessible building. Built as a monument to the westward expansion of the United States, it is the centerpiece of the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial and has become an internationally famous symbol of St. Louis.

The arch sits at the site of St. Louis' founding on the west bank of the Mississippi River.

The Gateway Arch was designed by Finnish-American architect Eero Saarinen and German-American structural engineer Hannskarl Bandel in 1947. Construction began on February 12, 1963, and was completed on October 28, 1965, for $13 million (equivalent to $180 million in 2013). The monument opened to the public on June 10, 1967.

Physical characteristics
Both the width and height of the arch are 630 feet (192 m). The arch is the tallest memorial in the United States and the tallest stainless steel monument in the world.

The cross-sections of the arch's legs are equilateral triangles, narrowing from 54 feet (16 m) per side at the bases to 17 feet (5.2 m) per side at the top. Each wall consists of a stainless steel skin covering a sandwich of two carbon-steel walls with reinforced concrete in the middle from ground level to 300 feet (91 m), with carbon steel to the peak. The arch is hollow to accommodate an unique tram system that takes visitors to an observation deck at the top.

The structural load is supported by a stressed-skin design. Each leg is embedded in 25,980 short tons (23,570 t) of concrete 44 feet (13 m) thick and 60 feet (18 m) deep. Twenty feet (6.1 m) of the foundation is in bedrock. The arch is resistant to earthquakes and is designed to sway up to 9 inches (23 cm) in either direction while withstanding winds up to 150 miles per hour (240 km/h). The structure weighs 42,878 short tons (38,898 t), of which concrete composes 25,980 short tons (23,570 t); structural steel interior, 2,157 short tons (1,957 t); and the stainless steel panels that cover the exterior of the arch, 886 short tons (804 t). This amount of stainless steel is the most used in any one project in history.The base of each leg at ground level had to have an engineering tolerance of 1⁄64 inch (0.40 mm) or the two legs would not meet at the top

Design competition (1945–1948)
In November 1944, Smith discussed with Newton Drury, the National Park Service Director, the design of the memorial, asserting that the memorial should be "transcending in spiritual and aesthetic values," best represented by "one central feature: a single shaft, a building, an arch, or something else that would symbolize American culture and civilization."

The idea of an architectural competition to determine the design of the memorial was favored at the inaugural meeting of the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial Association (JNEMA), which planned to award cash for the best design. In January 1945, the JNEMA officially announced a two-stage design competition that would cost $225,000 to organize. Smith and the JNEMA struggled to raise the funds, garnering only a third of the required total by June 1945. Then mayor Aloys Kaufmann feared that the lack of public support would lead officials to abandon hope in the project. The passage of a year brought little success, and Smith frantically underwrote the remaining $40,000 in May 1946. By June, Smith found others to assume portions of his underwriting, with $17,000 remaining under his sponsorship. In February 1947, the underwriters were compensated, and the fund stood over $231,199.

Saarinen's team included himself as designer, J. Henderson Barr as associate designer, and Dan Kiley as landscape architect, as well as Lily Swann Saarinen as sculptor and Alexander Girard as painter. In the first stage of the competition, Swedish sculptor Carl Milles advised Saarinen to change the bases of each leg to triangles instead of squares. Saarinen said that he "worked at first with mathematical shapes, but finally adjusted it according to the eye." At submission, Saarinen's plans laid out the arch at 509 feet (155 m) tall and 592 feet (180 m) wide from center to center of the triangle bases.

On September 1, 1947, submissions for the first stage were received by the jury. The submissions were labeled by numbers only, and the names of the designers were kept anonymous. Upon four days of deliberation, the jury narrowed down the 172 submissions, which included Saarinen's father Eliel, to five finalists, and announced the corresponding numbers to the media on September 27. Saarinen's design (#144) was among the finalists, and comments written on it included "relevant, beautiful, perhaps inspired would be the right word" (Roland Wank) and "an abstract form peculiarly happy in its symbolism" (Charles Nagel). Hare questioned the feasibility of the design but appreciated the thoughtfulness behind it. Local St. Louis architect Harris Armstrong was also one of the finalists. The secretary who sent out the telegrams informing finalists of their advancement mistakenly sent one to Eliel rather than Eero. The family celebrated with champagne, and two hours later, a competition representative called to correct the mistake. Eliel 'broke out a second bottle of champagne' to toast his son.

Public access
In April 1965, three million tourists were expected to visit the arch after completion; 619,763 tourists visited the top of the arch in its first year open. On January 15, 1969, a visitor from Nashville, Tennessee became the one-millionth person to reach the observation area; the ten-millionth person ascended to the top on August 24, 1979. In 1974, the arch was ranked fourth on a list of "most-visited man-made attraction". The Gateway Arch is one of the most visited tourist attractions in the world with over four million visitors annually, of which around one million travel to the top. The arch was listed as a National Historic Landmark on June 2, 1987, and is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Visitor center
The underground visitor center for the arch was designed as part of the National Park Service's Mission 66 program. The 70,000-square-foot (6,500 m2) center is located directly below the arch, between its legs. Although construction on the visitor center began at the same time as construction for the arch itself, it did not conclude until 1976 because of insufficient funding; however, the center opened with several exhibits on June 10, 1967. Access to the visitor center is provided through ramps adjacent to each leg of the arch.

Observation area
Near the top of the Arch, passengers exit the tram compartment and climb a slight grade to enter the observation area. This arched deck, 65 feet (20 m) long and 7 feet (2.1 m) wide, can hold about 160 people, four trams' worth. Sixteen windows per side, each measuring 7 by 27 inches (180 mm × 690 mm), offer views up to 30 miles (48 km): to the east across the Mississippi River and southern Illinois with its prominent Mississippian culture mounds at Cahokia Mounds, and to the west over the city of St. Louis and St. Louis County beyond.

Symbolism and culture
Built as a monument to the westward expansion of the United States, the arch typifies "the pioneer spirit of the men and women who won the West, and those of a latter day to strive on other frontiers." The arch has become the iconic image of St. Louis, appearing in many parts of city culture. In 1968, three years after the monument's opening, the St. Louis phone directory contained 65 corporations with "Gateway" in their title and 17 with "Arch". Arches also appeared over gas stations and drive-in restaurants. In the 1970s, a local sports team adopted the name "Fighting Arches"; St. Louis Community College would later (when consolidating all athletic programs under a single banner) name its sports teams "Archers". Robert S. Chandler, an NPS superintendent, said, "Most [visitors] are awed by the size and scale of the Arch, but they don't understand what it's all about ... Too many people see it as just a symbol of the city of St. Louis."

The arch has also appeared as a symbol of the State of Missouri. On November 22, 2002, at the Missouri State Capitol, Lori Hauser Holden, wife of then Governor Bob Holden uncovered the winning design for a Missouri coin design competition as part of the Fifty States Commemorative Coin Program. Designed by watercolorist Paul Jackson, the coin portrays "three members of the Lewis and Clark expedition paddling a boat on the Missouri River upon returning to St. Louis" with the arch as the backdrop. Holden said that the arch was "a symbol for the entire state ... Four million visitors each year see the Arch. [The coin] will help make it even more loved worldwide." A special license plate designed by Arnold Worldwide featured the arch, labeled with "Gateway to the West." Profits earned from selling the plates would fund the museum and other educational components of the arch.
วันที่ Taken on 11 มิถุนายน พ.ศ. 2556, 09:50
แหล่งที่มา Gateway Arch - St. Louis - Missouri
ผู้สร้างสรรค์ Sam valadi

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This image was originally posted to Flickr by Arch_Sam at https://flickr.com/photos/132084522@N05/17275578342 (). It was reviewed on 13 มกราคม พ.ศ. 2561 by FlickreviewR 2 and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc-by-2.0.

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11 มิถุนายน 2013

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ไฟล, gateway, arch, louis, missouri, 17275578342, ไฟล, ประว, ไฟล, หน, าท, ภาพน, การใช, ไฟล, วนกลาง, อม, ลเก, ยวก, บภาพขนาดของต, วอย, างน, กเซล, ความละเอ, ยดอ, กเซล, กเซล, กเซล, ภาพท, ความละเอ, ยดส, งกว, 8206, กเซล, ขนาดไฟล, โลไบต, ชน, ดไมม, image, jpeg, ปภาพหร. ifl prawtiifl hnathimiphaphni karichiflswnklang khxmulekiywkbphaphkhnadkhxngtwxyangni 800 441 phikesl khwamlaexiydxun 320 177 phikesl 640 353 phikesl 1 200 662 phikesl duphaphthimikhwamlaexiydsungkwa 8206 1 200 662 phikesl khnadifl 273 kiolibt chnidimm image jpeg rupphaphhruxiflesiyngni tnchbbxyuthi khxmmxns raylaexiyddanlang epnkhxkhwamthiaesdngphlcak ifltnchbbinkhxmmxns khxmmxnsepnewbistinokhrngkarsahrbekbrwbrwmsuxesri thi khunsamarthchwyid khwamyx khaxthibayGateway Arch St Louis Missouri 17275578342 jpg The Gateway Arch is a 630 foot 192 m monument in St Louis in the U S state of Missouri Clad in stainless steel and built in the form of an inverted weighted catenary arch it is the world s tallest arch the tallest monument in the Western Hemisphere and Missouri s tallest accessible building Built as a monument to the westward expansion of the United States it is the centerpiece of the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial and has become an internationally famous symbol of St Louis The arch sits at the site of St Louis founding on the west bank of the Mississippi River The Gateway Arch was designed by Finnish American architect Eero Saarinen and German American structural engineer Hannskarl Bandel in 1947 Construction began on February 12 1963 and was completed on October 28 1965 for 13 million equivalent to 180 million in 2013 The monument opened to the public on June 10 1967 Physical characteristics Both the width and height of the arch are 630 feet 192 m The arch is the tallest memorial in the United States and the tallest stainless steel monument in the world The cross sections of the arch s legs are equilateral triangles narrowing from 54 feet 16 m per side at the bases to 17 feet 5 2 m per side at the top Each wall consists of a stainless steel skin covering a sandwich of two carbon steel walls with reinforced concrete in the middle from ground level to 300 feet 91 m with carbon steel to the peak The arch is hollow to accommodate an unique tram system that takes visitors to an observation deck at the top The structural load is supported by a stressed skin design Each leg is embedded in 25 980 short tons 23 570 t of concrete 44 feet 13 m thick and 60 feet 18 m deep Twenty feet 6 1 m of the foundation is in bedrock The arch is resistant to earthquakes and is designed to sway up to 9 inches 23 cm in either direction while withstanding winds up to 150 miles per hour 240 km h The structure weighs 42 878 short tons 38 898 t of which concrete composes 25 980 short tons 23 570 t structural steel interior 2 157 short tons 1 957 t and the stainless steel panels that cover the exterior of the arch 886 short tons 804 t This amount of stainless steel is the most used in any one project in history The base of each leg at ground level had to have an engineering tolerance of 1 64 inch 0 40 mm or the two legs would not meet at the topDesign competition 1945 1948 In November 1944 Smith discussed with Newton Drury the National Park Service Director the design of the memorial asserting that the memorial should be transcending in spiritual and aesthetic values best represented by one central feature a single shaft a building an arch or something else that would symbolize American culture and civilization The idea of an architectural competition to determine the design of the memorial was favored at the inaugural meeting of the Jefferson National Expansion Memorial Association JNEMA which planned to award cash for the best design In January 1945 the JNEMA officially announced a two stage design competition that would cost 225 000 to organize Smith and the JNEMA struggled to raise the funds garnering only a third of the required total by June 1945 Then mayor Aloys Kaufmann feared that the lack of public support would lead officials to abandon hope in the project The passage of a year brought little success and Smith frantically underwrote the remaining 40 000 in May 1946 By June Smith found others to assume portions of his underwriting with 17 000 remaining under his sponsorship In February 1947 the underwriters were compensated and the fund stood over 231 199 Saarinen s team included himself as designer J Henderson Barr as associate designer and Dan Kiley as landscape architect as well as Lily Swann Saarinen as sculptor and Alexander Girard as painter In the first stage of the competition Swedish sculptor Carl Milles advised Saarinen to change the bases of each leg to triangles instead of squares Saarinen said that he worked at first with mathematical shapes but finally adjusted it according to the eye At submission Saarinen s plans laid out the arch at 509 feet 155 m tall and 592 feet 180 m wide from center to center of the triangle bases On September 1 1947 submissions for the first stage were received by the jury The submissions were labeled by numbers only and the names of the designers were kept anonymous Upon four days of deliberation the jury narrowed down the 172 submissions which included Saarinen s father Eliel to five finalists and announced the corresponding numbers to the media on September 27 Saarinen s design 144 was among the finalists and comments written on it included relevant beautiful perhaps inspired would be the right word Roland Wank and an abstract form peculiarly happy in its symbolism Charles Nagel Hare questioned the feasibility of the design but appreciated the thoughtfulness behind it Local St Louis architect Harris Armstrong was also one of the finalists The secretary who sent out the telegrams informing finalists of their advancement mistakenly sent one to Eliel rather than Eero The family celebrated with champagne and two hours later a competition representative called to correct the mistake Eliel broke out a second bottle of champagne to toast his son Public access In April 1965 three million tourists were expected to visit the arch after completion 619 763 tourists visited the top of the arch in its first year open On January 15 1969 a visitor from Nashville Tennessee became the one millionth person to reach the observation area the ten millionth person ascended to the top on August 24 1979 In 1974 the arch was ranked fourth on a list of most visited man made attraction The Gateway Arch is one of the most visited tourist attractions in the world with over four million visitors annually of which around one million travel to the top The arch was listed as a National Historic Landmark on June 2 1987 and is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places Visitor center The underground visitor center for the arch was designed as part of the National Park Service s Mission 66 program The 70 000 square foot 6 500 m2 center is located directly below the arch between its legs Although construction on the visitor center began at the same time as construction for the arch itself it did not conclude until 1976 because of insufficient funding however the center opened with several exhibits on June 10 1967 Access to the visitor center is provided through ramps adjacent to each leg of the arch Observation area Near the top of the Arch passengers exit the tram compartment and climb a slight grade to enter the observation area This arched deck 65 feet 20 m long and 7 feet 2 1 m wide can hold about 160 people four trams worth Sixteen windows per side each measuring 7 by 27 inches 180 mm 690 mm offer views up to 30 miles 48 km to the east across the Mississippi River and southern Illinois with its prominent Mississippian culture mounds at Cahokia Mounds and to the west over the city of St Louis and St Louis County beyond Symbolism and culture Built as a monument to the westward expansion of the United States the arch typifies the pioneer spirit of the men and women who won the West and those of a latter day to strive on other frontiers The arch has become the iconic image of St Louis appearing in many parts of city culture In 1968 three years after the monument s opening the St Louis phone directory contained 65 corporations with Gateway in their title and 17 with Arch Arches also appeared over gas stations and drive in restaurants In the 1970s a local sports team adopted the name Fighting Arches St Louis Community College would later when consolidating all athletic programs under a single banner name its sports teams Archers Robert S Chandler an NPS superintendent said Most visitors are awed by the size and scale of the Arch but they don t understand what it s all about Too many people see it as just a symbol of the city of St Louis The arch has also appeared as a symbol of the State of Missouri On November 22 2002 at the Missouri State Capitol Lori Hauser Holden wife of then Governor Bob Holden uncovered the winning design for a Missouri coin design competition as part of the Fifty States Commemorative Coin Program Designed by watercolorist Paul Jackson the coin portrays three members of the Lewis and Clark expedition paddling a boat on the Missouri River upon returning to St Louis with the arch as the backdrop Holden said that the arch was a symbol for the entire state Four million visitors each year see the Arch The coin will help make it even more loved worldwide A special license plate designed by Arnold Worldwide featured the arch labeled with Gateway to the West Profits earned from selling the plates would fund the museum and other educational components of the arch wnthi Taken on 11 mithunayn ph s 2556 09 50aehlngthima Gateway Arch St Louis Missouriphusrangsrrkh Sam valadi karxnuyatichsiththi iflnixyuphayitsyyaxnuyatkhriexthifkhxmmxns run aesdngthima 2 0 thwipkhunsamarth thicaaebngpn thicathasaena aeckcay aelasngngandngklawtxip thicaeriyberiyngihm thicaddaeplngngandngklaw phayitenguxnikhtxipni aesdngthima khuntxngihekiyrtiecakhxngnganxyangehmaasm odyephimlingkipyngsyyaxnuyat aelarabuhakmikarepliynaeplng khunxacthaechnniidinrupaebbidkidtamkhwr aettxngimichinlksnathiaenawaphuihxnuyatsnbsnunkhunhruxkarichngankhxngkhunhttps creativecommons org licenses by 2 0 CC BY 2 0 Creative Commons Attribution 2 0 true true This image was originally posted to Flickr by Arch Sam at https flickr com photos 132084522 N05 17275578342 archive It was reviewed on 13 mkrakhm ph s 2561 by FlickreviewR 2 and was confirmed to be licensed under the terms of the cc by 2 0 13 mkrakhm ph s 2561khabrryayodyyxithyephimkhabrryaythrrthdediywephuxkhyaykhwamwaiflnimixairixethmthiaesdngxyuiniflniprakxbdwyphusrangbangkhathiimmiixethmwikisnethsFlickr user ID xngkvs 132084522 N05chuxphusrangsrrkh Sam valadiyuxaraexl https www flickr com people 132084522 N05sthanalikhsiththimilikhsiththisyyaxnuyatCreative Commons Attribution 2 0 Generic xngkvswnthisrang wnkxtng11 mithunayn 2013bnthukphaphdwyCanon EOS 600D xngkvsthimakhxngiflfile available on the internet xngkvsxthibayin URL https www flickr com photos 132084522 N05 17275578342 phudaeninkar flikhekxr prawtiifl khlikwnthi ewlaephuxduiflthipraktinkhnann wnthi ewlarupyxkhnadphuichkhwamehn pccubn19 45 13 mkrakhm 25611 200 662 273 kiolibt FeministTransferred from Flickr via Flickr2Commons hnathimiphaphni hnatxipni oyngmathiphaphni esnthluys karichiflswnklang wikixuntxipniichiflni karichbn ast wikipedia org Gran Saint Louis karichbn az wikipedia org Sent Luis karichbn bn wikipedia org স ন ট ল ইস karichbn en wikipedia org User Jhenderson777 World cities map karichbn et wikipedia org Saint Louis karichbn ia wikipedia org St Louis Missouri karichbn ku wikipedia org St Louis karichbn lv wikipedia org Sentluisa karichbn pl wikipedia org Missouri stan karichbn ps wikipedia org سنت لویز karichbn sw wikipedia org St Louis Missouri karichbn www wikidata org Q38022khxmulekiywkbphaph phaphnimikhxmulephimetim sungswnihymacakklxngdicitxlhruxsaeknenxrthisamarthekbkhxmuldngklawiwrwmkbphaphid thaphaphnithukprbprungaekikhhruxepliynaeplngcakedim khxmulbangxyangcayngkhngimepliynaeplngehmuxnphaphthithukprbprungaekikhnnphuphlitklxngCanonrunkhxngklxngCanon EOS REBEL T3iewlaepidhnaklxng1 80 winathi 0 0125 khaexff 22xtrakhwamerw ISO100ewlathibnthukphaph09 50 11 mithunayn 2556khwamyawofkselns34 mm karcdwangphaphpktikhwamlaexiydaenwnxn72 dpikhwamlaexiydaenwtng72 dpiaekikhphaphlasud09 50 11 mithunayn 2556taaehnng Y aela CCo sitedopraekrmexksophechxrtngkhaexngrunexksif Exif 2 3ewlathiaeplngepndicithl09 50 11 mithunayn 2556khwamhmaykhxngaetlakhxmophenntY Cb Cr immikhakhwamerwchtetxr6 375kharurbaesng A 9karchdechyaesng0ohmdkarwdaesngspxtaeflchimichaeflch rangbichaeflch ekhathungcak https th wikipedia org wiki ifl Gateway Arch St Louis Missouri 17275578342 jpg, wikipedia, วิกิ หนังสือ, หนังสือ, ห้องสมุด,

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