slippedvoussoir:Speaking of petty... plans are two-dimensional representations of a horizontal cut of a building's interior or of its site. Exteriors are not represented in plan (they are represented in elevations), and even if they were, they could neither be "cylindrical" nor "spherical," as those are three-dimmensional objects, and plans, as I already said, are two-dimensional representations. Having said all of that,the exterior shape of the Gugenheim is not a cylinder. It is more like a cone whose tip has been lopped off.
I suppose I should have left out "in plan".... While it's untrue that exteriors are only shown in elevation (ever build a roof? ... a roof plan is useful...), technically speaking I was also incorrect, as both buildings are circular in plan, right?
In any event, I wasn't referring to the 2d representation, I was referring to the 3d construction. The upshot being that whether the buildings/cylinder(s) are tapered or uniform, and no matter how the 3d object is represented on paper, in no case do they bear any resemblance to a sphere.
And so much for all that.