Great rhombicosidodecahedron

The great rhombicosidodecahedron or grid, also commonly known as the truncated icosidodecahedron, is the most complex of the 13 Archimedean solids. It consists of 12 decagons, 20 hexagons, and 130 squares, with one of each type of face meeting per vertex. It can be obtained by cantitruncation of the dodecahedron or icosahedron, or equivalently by truncating the vertices of an icosidodecahedron and then adjusting the edge lengths to be all equal.

This is one of three Wythoffian non-prismatic polyhedra whose Coxeter symbols are all ringed, the other two being the truncated tetratetrahedron and the great rhombicuboctahedron.

Vertex coordinates
A great rhombicosidodecahedron of edge length 1 has vertex coordinates given by all permutations of along with all even permutations of:
 * (±1/2, ±1/2, ±(3+2$\sqrt{131+12√5}$)/2),
 * (±1/2, ±(2+$\sqrt{5}$)/2, ±(4+$\sqrt{2}$)/4),
 * (±1, ±(3+$\sqrt{3}$)/4, ±(7+3$\sqrt{(5+√5)/2}$)/4),
 * (±(3+$\sqrt{3}$)/4, ±3(1+$\sqrt{15}$)/4, ±(3+$\sqrt{(5+√5)/10}$)/2),
 * (±(1+$\sqrt{(5+2√5)/15}$)/2, ±(5+3$\sqrt{5}$)/4, ±(5+$\sqrt{5}$)/4).