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Spire

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

Detailed view of the ornate spires on the roof of Milan Cathedral, showcasing beautiful Gothic architecture.

A spire is a tall, thin, pointed shape placed on top of a roof or tower. You often see spires at the top of church steeples. They can be square, round, or many-sided. Spires usually look like a cone or a pyramid.

People build spires from stonework, brickwork, or timber covered with metal, tiles, or slates.

Spire of Salisbury Cathedral (completed 1320), 123 m (404 ft)

Towers that hold spires are often square. Spires with a square base grow right out of the tower walls. Octagonal spires are special. They sit on a pyramid shape called a broach, or they have open spaces around the tower’s top for decorations like pinnacles. Very small spires are sometimes called spikes, spirelets, or flèches.

Etymology

The word "spire" has been used in English since the 1590s. It comes from an old word in Middle Low German and is related to an Old English word meaning a small growth like a sprout or stalk.

Gothic spires

Chartres Cathedral. The Flamboyant Gothic North Tower (finished 1513) (left) and Romanesque South Tower (1144–1150) (right)

Gothic church spires started in the 12th century as simple, pointed tops on church towers. These spires could be made from stone, like at Salisbury Cathedral, or from wood covered with lead, like at Notre-Dame de Paris. Over time, spires grew taller and more complex. Extra stone pieces called broaches were added at angles to the tower sides, as seen at St Columba, Cologne. Decorations like small gabled windows, known as dormers, and thin pyramid-shaped pinnacles were also added.

By the late 13th century, spires reached great heights. For example, Freiburg Minster in Germany had a spire and lantern that stood 385 feet tall. In England, tall, thin spires were sometimes built at the edge of towers, with pinnacles at the corners, like at Lichfield Cathedral. Because spires were delicate in the wind, some fell down over the years. To keep them standing, builders added supports like buttresses, arches, and iron ties. The spire at Salisbury Cathedral, finished in 1320 and 404 feet tall, needed these supports to stay upright. Later, architect Christopher Wren added special beams to stop the spire from changing shape. Openwork spires, where stonework was pierced and held together by iron, were an important new design that made structures lighter and more elegant.

Crown spires

Main article: Crown spire

Crown spire on the High Kirk, Edinburgh.

Crown spires have a structure with open arches, like the design of a medieval European crown. These spires are held up by strong supports called buttresses.

Needle-spires and Hertfordshire spikes

Main article: Hertfordshire spike

A needle-spire is a very tall and thin spire that rises from a tower which is surrounded by a parapet. These spires are usually larger and more detailed than another type called a Hertfordshire spike.

A Hertfordshire spike is a short spire or tower topping found on churches in the British Isles. It is often ringed with a parapet.

Splay-foot

The roofs of splay-foot spires spread out and flatten at the base. This creates eaves above the tower that supports the spire.

Flèches

Main article: Flèche (architecture)

Rouen Cathedral, with 151 m (495 ft) the tallest flèche in France

A flèche is a special kind of spire found on old buildings, especially churches. In French, "flèche" means "arrow." It is a small, pointed tower on a roof. These tiny spires were often placed where the center aisle of a church crosses other sections. They were usually made of wood and covered with shiny metal like lead or copper. They often had pretty designs and small supports.

One famous flèche was built on Notre-Dame de Paris in the 1800s by an architect named Eugène Viollet-le-Duc. It was very tall—about 100 feet—and had many detailed carvings. The original one from the 1200s was taken down in 1786. The beautiful 1800s version was lost in a big fire in 2019. People plan to rebuild it to look like it did before.

Pinnacles

Main article: Pinnacle

Gothic pinnacles of Milan Cathedral

A pinnacle is a small, pretty spire on top of buildings. In old Gothic buildings, like Notre-Dame de Paris, stone pinnacles were placed on flying buttresses to add weight and support. They also helped balance the push from the rib vaults in the main hall. Later, they were used to make flat parts of roofs and towers more beautiful, sometimes grouped together to look like a forest of tall shapes.

Traditional types of spires

Traditional spires come in many shapes and sizes, each with its own special look. One common type is the conical stone spire, usually found on small, round towers. Another is the masonry spire, often seen on big churches and cathedrals with square towers. These can be pyramid-shaped on smaller towers or octagonal on larger ones. An example is the famous spire of Salisbury Cathedral, which has been standing tall since the 1200s.

Openwork spires are made of a network of stone patterns, letting light through and allowing them to grow very tall. Some of the world’s tallest church spires are like this. There are also complex spires that mix solid stone with open patterns, and clad spires made of wood covered in metal, tiles, or shingles. These can be pyramid-shaped, have a special four-sided roof called a Rhenish helm, an octagonal shape called a broach spire, or even a bell shape common in parts of Europe.

Notable spires

The spire of Burghley House (1555–1587) is an example of a spire on non-religious building.

Religious symbolism

In Gothic architecture, especially in Gothic cathedrals and churches, spires were built to show the high hopes of the people who built them. They also looked very tall and impressive. Because they looked like spear points, spires were thought to show the strength of religion.

The Chrysler Building was the world-first skyscraper with a spire

List of tallest spires (skyscraper)

RankNameSpire heightCompletedCountryCity
1Burj Khalifa244 m (801 ft)2009 United Arab EmiratesDubai
2Merdeka 118160 m (520 ft)2021 MalaysiaKuala Lumpur
3One World Trade Center124.3 m (408 ft)2014 United StatesNew York City
4Lakhta Center101 m (331 ft)2019 RussiaSaint Petersburg
5Bank of America Tower110.8 m (364 ft)2009 United StatesNew York City
6Abraj Al-Bait Clock Tower71 m (233 ft)2012 Saudi ArabiaMecca
7Landmark 8165 m (213 ft)2018 VietnamHo Chi Minh City
8Autograph Tower60 m (200 ft)2022 IndonesiaJakarta
9Taipei 10159 m (194 ft)2004 TaiwanTaipei
10Bank of China Tower52.4 m (172 ft)1990 ChinaHong Kong
11Empire State Building51 m (167 ft)1931 United StatesNew York City
12Petronas Tower 150 m (160 ft)1996 MalaysiaKuala Lumpur
Petronas Tower 2
13Emirates Tower One43.6 m (143 ft)2000 United Arab EmiratesDubai
14Emirates Tower Two40 m (130 ft)2000 United Arab EmiratesDubai
15Chrysler Building37 m (121 ft)1930 United StatesNew York City
16Jin Mao Tower35 m (115 ft)1999 ChinaShanghai
17One Vanderbilt30 m (98 ft)2020 United StatesNew York City
18IPK Kedah Tower15 m (49 ft)2012 MalaysiaAlor Setar
SADA Tower2016

Images

The ornate lantern tower of Burgos Cathedral, showcasing its intricate spires and decorative elements.
Taipei 101 is a tall, impressive building in Taiwan that was once the tallest skyscraper in the world!
A simple diagram showing the structure of a gable roof, great for learning about different roof shapes!

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Spire, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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