The other architecture: From natural caves to excavated housing


Autoria(s): Piedecausa-García, Beatriz; Pérez Sánchez, Juan Carlos
Contribuinte(s)

Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Edificación y Urbanismo

Materiales y Sistemas Constructivos de la Edificación

Data(s)

07/01/2016

07/01/2016

2015

Resumo

Excavated towns are an attractive example of underground urbanism that managed to solve, in a very interesting way, thermal problems thanks to natural ground inertia or transition spaces. The aim of this paper is to show the typological evolution of excavated dwellings worldwide, as an architectural proposal and urban solution. The proposed methodology provides an analysis of underground architectures from natural caves to excavated housing, focusing on the study of global constructive solutions to specific problems. Thus, architectures as a natural geography correction (horizontal excavation), buried underground architectures (vertical excavation), subtractive architectures (shallow excavation) and combined architectures (mixed excavation) are studied. In conclusion, there are many examples of typological combinations since troglodyte architects tried to adapt the most elementary constructive rules to get greatly enriched results. These proposals of different underground structures deal with each territory and its geographical features, and obtain urban and architectural solutions transferable to current configurations.

Identificador

C. Mileto, F. Vegas, L. García Soriano & V. Cristini (Eds.). Earthen Architecture: Past, Present and Future. Leiden: CRC, 2015. ISBN 978-1-138-02711-4, pp. 283-286

978-1-13802711-4

http://hdl.handle.net/10045/52163

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

CRC Press

Direitos

© 2015 Taylor & Francis Group, London

info:eu-repo/semantics/restrictedAccess

Palavras-Chave #Cave #Architecture #Excavated #Housing #Construcciones Arquitectónicas
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject