Brunelleschi’s solution was a masterclass in physics and "thinking outside the box":
By the early 15th century, the Santa Maria del Fiore cathedral was a source of civic embarrassment. It had sat roofless for decades because no one knew how to build a dome large enough to cover its 143-foot-wide opening without the walls collapsing. Traditional Gothic flying buttresses were forbidden in Florence—they were seen as "German" and ugly. The city needed a miracle. The Medici Gamble Medici - The Dome an...
To move heavy marble hundreds of feet into the air, he invented the world’s first reversible gear hoist, powered by oxen. The Legacy Brunelleschi’s solution was a masterclass in physics and
When the dome was completed in 1436, it was the largest in the world. For the Medici, it was a triumph. The dome became a physical symbol of the "Medici Golden Age," visible from miles away, signaling that Florence—and the family that funded it—was the center of the civilized world. The city needed a miracle
They put their weight behind Brunelleschi, a man whose ideas sounded like madness to his peers. He proposed building a massive dome without any internal wooden scaffolding (centering), claiming he could make the structure support itself as it rose. Brunelleschi’s Innovations
The story of the Florence Cathedral’s dome is as much a tale of political maneuvering and ego as it is about architectural genius. At the center of this drama was the , specifically Cosimo de' Medici, and the brilliant, hot-tempered goldsmith Filippo Brunelleschi . The Problem of the Void