DragonOfTheAerie
Vala
I am the type of writer that is allllll about setting descriptions. Love them. It's important that my settings be detailed and accurately described. One of the main settings in my WIP is a huge, sprawling, glorified monastery type of place. I'm basing the architecture (a little loosely) on various cathedrals and churches, mostly of the Gothic sort, since I like high and pointy.
I have a rough draft of a floorplan for this place, and a complete floorplan I can reference is going to be absolutely necessary. I've never had to actually design a building before. I also have never visited a cathedral or anything similar, so my experience is limited to wikipedia and youtube tours (often very incompetently filmed). As a result, i'm confused and stuck.
(And sick of internet research. I only wrote 250 or so words last night, in part because it took me half an hour to find the word 'pilaster.')
Questions:
Do those high, fancy towers not actually ever contain anything? What if I wanted to put rooms in a tower? (need someplace to put a remote secret room dangit; i have lots of remote secret rooms that have to go someplace remote and secret) Is that a castle instead? I can deal with hybridizing a cathedral and a castle or palace, this is 67% artistic license anyway, but an hour spent on the internet gives no answer as to how one would lay out the interior of a tower. All stairs and you could put a room at the top, or...I'm aware that real life brick/stone buildings where the walls are load bearing only can go 6 or 7 stories high at the most, but this place is probably magic and also Rule of Cool.
Sorry if I sound insufferably stupid. I genuinely just don't want my book to sound insufferably stupid.
Now what if you wanted to have something UNDERNEATH a tower? Is this structurally implausible? (i was an idiot and put one at the junction of two adjoining hallways and now i have no idea how one would access one of those fancy spiral staircases) (I probably will just have to redraw) (but where do I put that stupid tower)
basically, how does stuff like this look like on the inside
Sorry if these are dumb questions but yeah.
I have a rough draft of a floorplan for this place, and a complete floorplan I can reference is going to be absolutely necessary. I've never had to actually design a building before. I also have never visited a cathedral or anything similar, so my experience is limited to wikipedia and youtube tours (often very incompetently filmed). As a result, i'm confused and stuck.
(And sick of internet research. I only wrote 250 or so words last night, in part because it took me half an hour to find the word 'pilaster.')
Questions:
Do those high, fancy towers not actually ever contain anything? What if I wanted to put rooms in a tower? (need someplace to put a remote secret room dangit; i have lots of remote secret rooms that have to go someplace remote and secret) Is that a castle instead? I can deal with hybridizing a cathedral and a castle or palace, this is 67% artistic license anyway, but an hour spent on the internet gives no answer as to how one would lay out the interior of a tower. All stairs and you could put a room at the top, or...I'm aware that real life brick/stone buildings where the walls are load bearing only can go 6 or 7 stories high at the most, but this place is probably magic and also Rule of Cool.
Sorry if I sound insufferably stupid. I genuinely just don't want my book to sound insufferably stupid.
Now what if you wanted to have something UNDERNEATH a tower? Is this structurally implausible? (i was an idiot and put one at the junction of two adjoining hallways and now i have no idea how one would access one of those fancy spiral staircases) (I probably will just have to redraw) (but where do I put that stupid tower)
basically, how does stuff like this look like on the inside
Sorry if these are dumb questions but yeah.