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Geodesic Gingerbread House Template For the Holidays

An anonymous reader writes "Buckminster Fuller eat your heart out — LA-based design firm Scout Regalia has created a mail-order template for a geodesic gingerbread house that you can make at home. When you order a Gingerbread Geodesic Dome, you will receive a cardboard template that is very simple to put together. You then bake the gingerbread and cut it into little hexagons that are then 'glued' to the dome shell with icing."

3 of 61 comments (clear)

  1. Yawn by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you need a template to do this, you aren't a geometry geek.

  2. I weep for the nerd community I once knew by paiute · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seriously? 25 bucks for a pattern to make a tiny geodesic dome? I expect one of the next ten posts to contain a link to the equivalent free version whipped up in two minutes or I don't know this site anymore.

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    If Slashdot were chemistry it would look like this:Cadaverine
    1. Re:I weep for the nerd community I once knew by harperska · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It is in fact made of equilateral hexagons and pentagons. What it isn't made up of is true equilateral triangles. Each triangle face is slightly elongated so that the vertex of the triangle is raised above the plane of the hexagon/pentagon so that the resulting vertex is on the same circumscribed sphere that the hexagon/pentagon vertexes are on. That results in two different lengths of chords in the final dome, but all of the chords forming hexagons and pentagons in the base 'soccer ball' will be equilateral.

      Note that the gingerbread pattern isn't a true geodesic dome, as it is made up of just the hexagons and pentagons, not the subdivided triangles. So a gingerbread dome-home made from the http://www.geo-dome.co.uk/ pattern would be more impressive and satisfying to the pedantic nerds here on /.