at
Epcot greenhouse at
Missouri Botanical Garden, built in 1960 and designed by Thomas C. Howard of Synergetics, Inc., inspired the domes in the science fiction movie
Silent Running. in Vancouver, built for
Expo 86, and inspired by Buckminster Fuller's Geodesic dome. , public art designed by
Wolfgang Buttress, located in
Belfast, consists of two spheres which utilise Buckminster Fuller's Geodesic dome. The first geodesic dome was designed after
World War I by
Walther Bauersfeld, chief engineer of
Carl Zeiss Jena, an optical company, for a
planetarium to house his planetarium projector. An initial, small dome was patented and constructed by the firm of Dykerhoff and Wydmann on the roof of the Carl Zeiss Werke in
Jena,
Germany. A larger dome, called "The Wonder of Jena", opened to the public on July 18, 1926. Twenty years later,
Buckminster Fuller coined the term "geodesic" from field experiments with artist
Kenneth Snelson at
Black Mountain College in 1948 and 1949. Although Fuller was not the original inventor, he is credited with the U.S. popularization of the idea for which he received on 29 June 1954. The oldest surviving dome built by Fuller himself is located in
Woods Hole, Massachusetts, and was built by students under his tutelage over three weeks in 1953. The geodesic dome appealed to Fuller because it was extremely strong for its weight, its "omnitriangulated" surface provided an inherently stable structure, and because a sphere encloses the greatest volume for the least surface area. The dome was successfully adopted for specialized uses, such as the 21
Distant Early Warning Line domes built in Canada in 1956, the 1958
Union Tank Car Company dome near
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, designed by Thomas C. Howard of Synergetics, Inc. and specialty buildings such as the
Kaiser Aluminum domes (constructed in numerous locations across the US, e.g.,
Virginia Beach, Virginia), auditoriums, weather observatories, and storage facilities. The dome was soon breaking records for covered surface, enclosed volume, and construction speed. Beginning in 1954, the U.S. Marines experimented with
helicopter-deliverable geodesic domes. A wood and plastic geodesic dome was lifted and carried by helicopter at without damage, leading to the manufacture of a standard magnesium dome by Magnesium Products of Milwaukee. Tests included assembly practices in which previously untrained Marines were able to assemble a magnesium dome in 135 minutes, helicopter lifts off aircraft carriers, and a durability test in which an anchored dome successfully withstood without damage, a day-long propeller blast from the twin 3,000 horsepower engines of an anchored airplane. The 1958
Gold Dome in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, used Fuller's design for a bank building. Another early example was the
Stepan Center at the
University of Notre Dame, built in 1962. The dome was introduced to a wider audience as
a pavilion for the
1964 New York World's Fair designed by Thomas C. Howard of Synergetics, Inc. This dome is now used as an
aviary by the
Queens Zoo in
Flushing Meadows Corona Park. Another dome is from
Expo 67 at the
Montreal World's Fair, where it was part of the American Pavilion. The structure's covering later burned, but the structure itself still stands and, under the name
Biosphère, currently houses an interpretive
museum about the
Saint Lawrence River. In the 1970s,
Zomeworks licensed plans for structures based on other geometric solids, such as the
Johnson solids,
Archimedean solids, and
Catalan solids. These structures may have some faces that are not triangular, being squares or other polygons. In 1975, a dome was constructed at the
South Pole, where its resistance to snow and wind loads was important. On October 1, 1982, one of the most famous geodesic domes,
Spaceship Earth at
Epcot in
Walt Disney World Resort in
Bay Lake,
Florida, just outside of
Orlando opened. The building and the ride inside of it are named with one of Buckminster Fuller's famous terms,
Spaceship Earth, a world view expressing concern over the use of limited resources available on Earth and encouraging everyone on it to act as a harmonious crew working toward the greater good. The building is Epcot's icon, representing the entire park. For the
1986 World's Fair (Expo 86), held in
Vancouver, a Buckminster Fuller-inspired Geodesic dome was designed by the Expo's chief architect
Bruno Freschi to serve as the fair's Expo Centre. Construction began in 1984 and was completed by early 1985. The dome and the building now serve as an Arts, Science and Technology center, and has been named
Science World. In 2000, the world's first fully sustainable geodesic dome hotel, EcoCamp Patagonia, was built at
Kawésqar National Park in
Chilean
Patagonia, opening the following year in 2001. The hotel's dome design is key to resisting the region's strong winds and is based on the dwellings of the indigenous
Kaweskar people. Geodomes are also becoming popular as a
glamping (glamorous camping) unit. ==Methods of construction==