Leaning Tower of Pisa

The leaning tower of Pisa is more accurately referred to simply as the bell tower, or campanile. The tower is over 800 years old, and started leaning from the time it was first constructed. In fact, if you look closely, you can see that the tower isn’t completely straight. Why not? Because it started leaning during construction, they started to build the top stories at an angle, to counteract the leaning! medieval structure in Pisa, Italy, that is famous for the settling of its foundations, which caused it to lean 5.5 degrees (about 15 feet [4.5 metres]) from the perpendicular by the late 20th century.


Piazza dei Miracoli of Pisa is the most splendiferous assemblage of Romanesque architecture in Italy. Faced in gray-and-white striped marble and bristling with columns and arches, the cathedral, with its curiously Islamic dome and matching domed baptistery, rises from an emerald green lawn. It took some 200 years to complete the tower. With a lean that continued to progress even after its completion, the tower underwent thorough repairs from 1990 through 2001, which are intended to keep it from falling over for the next 200 years.

0 comments:

Post a Comment