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The fourth side of the courtyard is the mosque itself, which is designed as a hexagon inscribed in a rectangle, topped by a dome with four small semi-domes in the corners. [3] The dome is 13 metres (43 ft) in diameter and 22.8 metres (75 ft) high. [4] The ablution fountain in the courtyard has twelve columns supporting an onion shaped dome. [5]
Abalone is a two-player abstract strategy board game designed by Michel Lalet and Laurent Lévi in 1987. Players are represented by opposing black and white marbles [1] on a hexagonal board with the objective of pushing six of the opponent's marbles off the edge of the board.
[2] [3] The tiles of the Green Mosque complex generally have a deep green ground mixed with combinations of blue, white, and yellow forming arabesque motifs. A large portion of the tiles are cut into hexagonal and triangular shapes that were then fitted together to form murals. [4]
There are nods to history, including tin ceiling tiles over the cashier stations and black-and-white hexagon-tiled floors that at the store’s center spell out “Est. 1946.”
The dado is composed of buff hexagonal tiles and blue and black mosaic faience, broken up by narrow borders of four pointed stars. The mihrab is a simple inscribed marble slate. [3] The Jamaat Khana is distinguished from the masjid in only a few ways: it lacks a mihrab and a tiled dado. [3]
Zellij (Arabic: الزَّلِيْج) is geometric tilework with glazed terracotta tiles set into plaster, forming colourful mosaic patterns including regular and semiregular tessellations. The tradition is characteristic of Morocco, but is also found in Moorish Spain. Zellij is used to decorate mosques, public buildings and wealthy private houses.