A comparable structure is the monopteros, or cyclostyle which, however, lacks a cella.
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Office copier and cyclostyle machines.
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Named the Mashonaland Herald and Zambesian Times, it was a weekly, hand-written news sheet produced using the cyclostyle duplicating process.
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More examples
Print with an implement with small toothed wheels that cuts small holes in a stencil
A cyclostyle (from the Greek words for "circle" and "column") is a term used in architecture. A structure composed of a circular range of columns without a core is cyclostylar; with a core the range would be peristyle. This is the species of edifice called "monopteral" by Vitruvius.
The Cyclostyle duplicating process is a form of stencil copying invented by David Gestetner in London in 1890. A stencil is cut with the help of small toothed wheels on a special paper underlaid with carbon paper which serves as a printing form. ...
A circular group of columns without a core; A device used to make copies of a drawing or writing, via small punctures made in the outline; To use such a wheel and puncture device to make copies