HALF TIMBERED HOUSES- EUROPE l Fachwerkhäuser l colombage
HALF TIMBERED HOUSES- EUROPE l Fachwerkhäuser l colombage
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Half-timbering is a way of constructing wood frame structures with the structural timbers exposed. This medieval method of construction is called timber framing. A half-timbered building wears its wood frame on its sleeve, so to speak. The wooden wall framing — studs, cross beams, and braces — are exposed to the outside, and the spaces between the wooden timbers are filled with plaster, brick, or stone.
Wood is the basic material used in the construction of half-timbered buildings. The characteristic features of this wood, the climatic conditions and the carpenters’ skills are decisive to the dimensions and forms of the half-timbered houses.This building method is extremely ecological, environmentally sustainable and aesthetic.
Europe is full of timber-framed structures dating back hundreds of years, including manors, castles, homes, and inns, whose architecture and techniques of construction have evolved over the centuries.
Half-timbered towns and villages remain a characteristic of the landscape in many parts of Germany to this day. There are many small towns which escaped both war damage and modernisation and consist mainly, or even entirely, of half-timbered houses. Indeed, the country’s more than 2.5 million half-timbered structures are the pride and joy of municipalities and owners.
More Details:
#Nikolas Davies, Erkki Jokiniemi: 2008. Dictionary of architecture and building construction. Architectural Press. ISBN 978-0-7506-8502-3. 726 pages: pp 181
#Richard Harris, Discovering Timber-framed Buildings (3rd rev. ed.), Shire Publications, 1993, ISBN 0-7478-0215-7
#Ronald Brunskill (1992) [1981]. Traditional Buildings of England. Gollancz. ISBN 0-575-05299-6
#Half-timber Work. Encyclopædia Britannica
#Jackson, Allen W. (1912). The half-timber house. NY: McBride, Nast & Co
#Sherwood, Mary Martha. The lady of the manor being a series of conversations on the subject of confirmation. Intended for the use of the middle and higher ranks of young females, Volume 5. Wellington, Salop. London: Printed by and for F. Houlston and Son. 1827. 168. Print.