2. • An igloo or snowhouse is a type of shelter built
of snow, originally built by the Inuit.
• Although igloos are usually associated with all
Inuit, they were predominantly constructed by
people of Canada's Central Arctic and
Greenland's Thule area. Other Inuit people
tended to use snow to insulate their houses,
which were constructed from whalebone and
hides. Snow is used because the air pockets
trapped in it make it an insulator. On the
outside, temperatures may be cold but on the
inside the temperature may be warmed by body
heat alone.
3.
4. • Mobile homes or static caravans are homes
built in factories, rather than on site, and then
taken to the place where they will be occupied.
Being built on a permanently attached chassis
with highway-grade wheels and tires, they are
usually transported by being pulled behind a
tractor-trailer over public roads to a home
site. Mobile homes share the same historic
origins as travel trailers, but today the two
are very different in size and furnishings, with
travel trailers being used primarily as
temporary or vacation homes.
5.
6. • Modern houses are made from expensive tools.
The modern houses were associated with some
great houses and some powerful countries and
companies. It became the equivalent of the
Classical Style in the Georgian period. Since the
seventies architecture styles have become more
fractured.
7.
8. • Bungalow is a type of house, with varying
meanings across the world. Common features to
many (but not all) of these definitions include
being detached , low-rise and the use of
vverandahs. Such houses were traditionally
small, only one story and detached, and had a
wide veranda.
9.
10. • Joglo houses has a typical trapezoidal lined
with four wooden poles rebuttal. An
interpretation joglo causing Java architecture
reflects tranquility, present among the
buildings that diverse. This interpretation is
characterized by the use of a solid roof
construction and arch-arch shape in space per
room.