Folk Architecture The most visible aspect of the folk landscape Provide the unique character of each district or province
Built on mental images that change little from one generation to the next
Dwellings range from: massive houses of stone for permanency, to temporary brush thatch huts
Structures tend to blend nicely with the natural landscape
Santa Fe
Sedona
Folk architecture is traditional and functional using local materials: wood, brick, stone, skins
Climate and vegetation influence choice of construction materials
Longitude and distance from ocean is very important to climate: Low latitudes are near the equator (0-30 degrees) High latitudes are near the poles (60-90) Middle latitudes are in between and where most people live. (30- 60)
Tropics
Simple explanation of climate There are 5 basic climates Polar: ice with little people so not significant to this class Cold mid latitude: Very cold winters but pretty nice the rest of the year Mild mid latitude: Temperatures are mild and it rarely freezes Humid low latitude: it rains a lot and never freezes
Dry: Also called arid. Very little precipitation but it might have very cold winters. Not all deserts are hot but it rarely rains.
Could use different names
Simple explanation of biomes (large zones of a type of vegetation) Near the equator there is tropical forest Between north pole and the northern forest there is tundra (the soil is frozen most of the year but not always covered in snow) in the colder mid latitudes there is forest (Russia, Canada, U.S. etc) There are deserts with brush (rarely sand dunes, usually bushes with walking distance between them). In between these two extremes grasslands are found (called savanna in the tropics where there is a dry season)
Folk housing building materials. Stone Construction Most live in rocky, deforested lands Mediterranean farmers rural residents of northern India and southwestern China (Tibet) Andean highlands
Earthen construction including Sun-dried (adobe) bricks People in arid areas (deserts)
Sod construction
In pioneer times, the American Great Plains
in prairie (mid latitude grasslands) Russian steppes
The first Europeans in Northern Canada
tundra areas
Canadian Barns were first made of sod TQ
Tent housing Nomadic herders often live in portable tents made of skins or wool This is a yurt
Logs and sawn lumber (wood) where timber is abundant Middle and higher latitudes The United States and Canada, log cabins and later frame houses Folk houses of northern Europe Eastern Australia Central India
Half-timbering wood frame with building material in between: such as clay or plaster. middle and higher latitudes Often deforested regions where wood is scarce Central Europe Central China
Poles, bamboo, leaves and bark Traditional people living in tropical rain forests
Brush –thatched People in the tropical grasslands (tropics with a dry season) especially in Africa Australia Brazil
You’ll need to study this from the powerpoint at home
Folk housing in North America Few folk houses are being built today Popular culture with its mass-produced, commercially built houses has overwhelmed folk traditions Many folk houses survive in refuge regions
Important factor in distinguishing different folk housing types in the U.S.: TQ choice of building materials form in which the structure is arranged climate in which the structure is built
Regions and diffusion
Today, house types in the US are distinguished by the following: TQ they display few regional distinctions they are usually mass-produced alternative styles have diffused throughout the country no longer three distinct regions