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INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER I: ON CLIMATE AS DETERMINING THE STYLE OF THE HOUSE
CHAPTER II: SYMMETRY, AND MODIFICATIONS IN IT TO SUIT THE SITE
CHAPTER III: PROPORTIONS OF THE PRINCIPAL ROOMS
CHAPTER IV: THE PROPER EXPOSURES OF THE DIFFERENT ROOMS
CHAPTER V: HOW THE ROOMS SHOULD BE SUITED TO THE STATION OF THE OWNER
CHAPTER VI: THE FARMHOUSE
CHAPTER VII: THE GREEK HOUSE
CHAPTER VIII: ON FOUNDATIONS AND SUBSTRUCTURES
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3. In width and length, atriums are designed according to three classes. The first is laid out by dividing the length into five parts and giving three parts to the width; the second, by dividing it into three parts and assigning two parts to the width; the third, by using the width to describe a square figure with equal sides, drawing a diagonal line in this square, and giving the atrium the length of this diagonal line.
Vitruvius: The Ten Books on Architecture. Vitruvius. Morris Hicky Morgan. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. London: Humphrey Milford. Oxford University Press. 1914.
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- Lewis & Short, dĭăgōnĭŏs
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