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    The Nissen hut is a prefabricated shelter that consists of a sheet of corrugated steel bent into half a cylinder and planted in the ground with its axis horizontal. The semicircular ends are closed with masonry walls. It was developed for the British military by Peter Norman Nissen, a Canadian mining engineer, in 1916, and used extensively during the Second World War by both the Commonwealth and U.S. military to facilitate the construction of hundreds of new installations.
    The Quonset hut, based on the Nissen hut, was developed by the US Navy in World War 2.


        Nissen hut
            Transport and storage
            Earthquake
            See also

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    Transport and storage

    Because the curved sheets can be cupped one inside another, the space needed to transport or store several hundred curved sheets is little more than the space needed to store one sheet.

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    Earthquake
    Because the Nissen hut has no weak right-angle bends between walls, roof and ground, its circular shape is good at withstanding earthquakes (see earthquake construction).

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    See also

    Image of a World War II USAAF Nissen Hut

    Nice Nissen hut pictured at nissenhut.com.





     
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    Scientus.org Dictionary (Yet Another Wiki) RC : 1.39
    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License [copyleft]. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Nissen hut". link