Vernacular
Vernacular
Vernacular
01/04/2020
Don’t we need to do more in our lives than just
leave a few buildings behind??
• Compared to the brick extrusion in the fired brick industry, stabilized extruded
earth bricks show a major inconvenient.
• The soil required for stabilized earth is much sandier than the one for fired earth.
•Thus the soil is more abrasive and the machines get damaged at a much faster
rate.
Earth
FORMED EARTH (Straw Clay) :
•Very clayey soil, in a liquid state, is poured
on straw, which has been chopped to the
desired length.
•The mix is generally tampered afterwards
into forms.
•These walls are not load-bearing.
•they are light, have a very high thermal
insulation value and must be built in a
wooden structure.
•It was traditionally used in Germany and
was re-used for reconstruction after the IInd
world war.
•It is mostly known with the name Straw clay.
•Straw clay can be used as a filler wall,
formed between a wooden structure or as
prefabricated blocks.
Earth
CUT EARTH:
• In areas where the soils was cohesive and
contained concretions of carbonates the soil
was cut in the shape of blocks and used like
bricks or stones.
• Such examples are found typically in tropical
areas where lateritic soils give a wonderful
building material.
• Lateritic soils can be found in two natural
states:
1. Soft soils- which will harden when exposed
to air due to chemical reaction of the soil
constituent with the air (carbonation reaction).
This natural reaction is called induration
2. Hard crust- which was long ago a soil and
has already hardened (indured) through the
ages.
•In areas where the soil is not cohesive
enough, people have used topsoil and grass
to create blocks.
Earth
Bamboo
Bamboo as a building material
has high compressive strength
and
low weight has been one of the most
used building material as support for
concrete, especially in those locations
where it is found in abundance.
Bamboo
Properties: Tensile Strength ; Compressive Strength;
Elastic Modulus; Anisotropic Property ; Shrinkage; Fire
Resistance
Various Structural Shapes of Bamboo as a Building
Material
• Split bamboo:
Culms are split along their length into strips, several
centimeters wide.
• Flattened bamboo:
Formed by splitting green bamboo culms removing
the diaphragms, then rolling and flattening them.
Bamboo as a building material
• Woven mats :
Mats should not be fixed by direct nailing, but are held in
place by bamboo strips or timber battens tied or nailed over
the top. This is one of the easiest types of traditional floor to
keep clean.
• Bamboo panels:
Layers of woven mats or strips, laid at right angles, are
bonded together into boards using resins and pressure and
thermal processes .These are then nailed to the joists.
• Parquettes
Thin slivers or mats of bamboo are formed into multi-layered
tiles and laid on treated bamboo or wooden strips fixed to
compacted earth or a concrete sub-floor.
Bamboo as a building material
WALLS
• Bamboo is extensively used for construction of walls and partitions.
• Posts and beams are the main elements normally constructed with
bamboo provide structural framework for walls.
• They positioned in a way to be able to withstand forces of nature.
• An infill is used between framing elements to add strength and stability to
the walls.
Bamboo as a building material
ROOFING
Bamboo as a building material
Bamboo as a building material
Timber and Stone
Timber and Stone
Timber and Stone
Timber and Stone
Timber and Stone
Timber and Stone
Timber and Stone
Jack Arch Roof
• Jack arch roof is an old form of roof construction in
which the roof consists of shallow (low rise) vaults made
with compression materials like burnt bricks or
compressed earth blocks, supported on intermediate
supports in the form of beams.
I
II
III
Filler slab
Filler slab is alternate slab construction technology where part of concrete in
bottom of slab is replaced by filler material.
The basic principal is that the concrete in bottom half of RCC slab is structurally
not required as concrete acts as compression material which is required in top
half portion of slab.
So this portion concrete is replaced by low cost, light weight filler material like
mangalore tile, clay pots etc.
Filler slab
Filler slab
Laurie Baker Ideology
I II III
V IV
Laurie Baker Ideology
VI VII
VIII IX
Laurie Baker Ideology
X: BRICKS are often slightly irregular in length. So even if you
X XI can get a smooth “fair face” on one side of a wall, the other side
will be lumpy and irregular. Therefore, many builders say, you
must plaster the wall.
The middle sketch and the lower plan show how the mortar can
fill over the sunken ends of the brick to produce a special fair
face on the second side of the wall.
AinA
3. Preparing of oxide proportions
AinA
Step 1
Workman 1:
20 - 30 Cleaning the frame
secs Setting the frame and
mould on the glass.
Workman 2:
Putting dry cement
sand mixture on the
earlier tile as a
jointing compound.
Leveling the layer of
dry mixture.
20 - 30 30-40
secs secs
Step 2
Workman 1:
Pouring of oxide into the
5-15 secs mould.
20 - 30 Workman 2:
Putting of wet cement
secs sand mixture.
Leveling the mixture.
Oxide layer
3-4 mm thk
Tile sizes
Floor border
10” x 10” 10”x 5”
8” x 8” 8” x 6”
8” x 5”
8” x 4”
We are so obsessed with our new identity that we refuse to
retrieve to our own culture….
Do we realize that we are losing
something consciously….