This document discusses traditional Maya housing in Guatemala and southern Mexico. It identifies three main geographical regions - the Highlands, Intermediate Highlands, and Lowlands - and describes the typical housing structures found in each, which vary based on available materials and climate. Though housing styles differ regionally, the author identifies common elements across regions, such as construction methods using local materials, the inclusion of four posts to support the roof structure, and cultural meanings related to housing. The document aims to analyze how Western-imposed changes to housing design have negatively impacted traditional Maya practices.
1) O documento apresenta um workshop sobre o software de comércio eletrônico Magento, abordando suas principais funcionalidades.
2) São apresentados tópicos como instalação e configuração, gerenciamento de lojas, categorias, atributos, produtos, promoções de marketing, métodos de pagamento e envio.
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The document discusses early human shelters from prehistoric times. It describes how the earliest shelters were found naturally in caves or were simple structures made from available natural materials. While caves were sometimes used, they were likely not the most common dwelling. Shelters evolved from simple rock shelters to constructed huts made of materials like reeds or animal skins. Characteristics of prehistoric shelters included their relationship to the means of survival like hunting and gathering. Permanent settlements emerged as agriculture developed, allowing for more stable food sources and the development of villages and specialized occupations. A variety of primitive shelter types are described that showed adaptations to different environments and materials.
This document discusses tribal housing in India. It begins by introducing India's tribal or Adivasi population and their distribution across the country. It then describes the local materials and customs used in tribal house construction. The document goes on to analyze tribal housing typologies in different geographic zones of India based on climate, available resources, and tribal group. It provides examples of house structures from various tribal communities. The construction techniques used include mud walls, thatched or tiled roofs, bamboo, wood, and adobe bricks. Housing patterns include cluster, linear, and scattered arrangements.
vernacular architecture of north east indiaHriday Das
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This document discusses different types of vernacular buildings and structures found in Ireland and Zambia. It describes hearth lobby houses and direct-entry houses that are distinguished by the placement of the door and hearth. Outshots, which housed beds, and insakas, structures used for gathering and cooking, are also summarized. The construction and uses of granaries, pit latrines, and variations in homestead layouts are briefly outlined.
1) O documento apresenta um workshop sobre o software de comércio eletrônico Magento, abordando suas principais funcionalidades.
2) São apresentados tópicos como instalação e configuração, gerenciamento de lojas, categorias, atributos, produtos, promoções de marketing, métodos de pagamento e envio.
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Australian Indigenous Architecture -Its Forms And EvolutionAndrew Molina
This document summarizes the evolution of Aboriginal architecture in Australia from pre-colonial times to the present. It identifies three major periods: (1) classical Aboriginal architecture prior to colonization, characterized by impermanent shelters adapted to local environments and weather; (2) acculturated architecture from the 19th-20th centuries, as Aboriginal people incorporated new materials into pastoral, mission and settlement camps while retaining cultural practices; and (3) outstation architecture from the 1970s onward, including self-constructed town camps made of scrap materials that maintained Aboriginal identity and autonomy despite poverty. The document examines shelter types, construction techniques, spatial organization and cultural meanings across these periods to argue that Aboriginal architecture constitutes an evolving tradition challenging non
vernacular architecture in context to Climate ChangeJanmejoy Gupta
The document discusses vernacular architecture and its importance for climate-responsive design. It explores examples of vernacular architecture from regions of India like Kerala and Kutch. Key determinants of vernacular design identified are climate, locally available materials, construction techniques, and socio-cultural influences. Lessons from traditional structures like use of thermal mass, ventilation, shading and passive cooling principles need to be understood and incorporated in modern construction to fight climate change.
The document discusses early human shelters from prehistoric times. It describes how the earliest shelters were found naturally in caves or were simple structures made from available natural materials. While caves were sometimes used, they were likely not the most common dwelling. Shelters evolved from simple rock shelters to constructed huts made of materials like reeds or animal skins. Characteristics of prehistoric shelters included their relationship to the means of survival like hunting and gathering. Permanent settlements emerged as agriculture developed, allowing for more stable food sources and the development of villages and specialized occupations. A variety of primitive shelter types are described that showed adaptations to different environments and materials.
This document discusses tribal housing in India. It begins by introducing India's tribal or Adivasi population and their distribution across the country. It then describes the local materials and customs used in tribal house construction. The document goes on to analyze tribal housing typologies in different geographic zones of India based on climate, available resources, and tribal group. It provides examples of house structures from various tribal communities. The construction techniques used include mud walls, thatched or tiled roofs, bamboo, wood, and adobe bricks. Housing patterns include cluster, linear, and scattered arrangements.
vernacular architecture of north east indiaHriday Das
The document provides information on the vernacular architecture of Northeast India, specifically focusing on the states of Arunachal Pradesh and Meghalaya. It describes the traditional building materials and construction techniques used by tribes in the region, which include bamboo, wood, thatch, and locally available plants. Houses are designed to be elevated on stilts for protection from floods and have sloped roofs to shed heavy monsoon rains. Interior spaces are organized based on family structure and social activities. The simple designs demonstrate an adaption to the cold, hilly environment with minimal insulation and openings.
This document discusses different types of vernacular buildings and structures found in Ireland and Zambia. It describes hearth lobby houses and direct-entry houses that are distinguished by the placement of the door and hearth. Outshots, which housed beds, and insakas, structures used for gathering and cooking, are also summarized. The construction and uses of granaries, pit latrines, and variations in homestead layouts are briefly outlined.
The document summarizes different types of traditional living spaces from around the world. It describes the vale houses of Fiji which have high-pitched roofs to withstand storms. The interior is divided into public and private zones. It also describes Tswana houses from Botswana which comprise several circular huts within a central enclosed yard, with different huts serving functions like sleeping, cooking, and storage. Floor plans and interior furnishings of the huts are also outlined. Key factors that influence dwelling forms like family structure, gender roles, and social interaction are discussed.
This document provides an overview of bamboo construction and its uses. It discusses bamboo's history and importance for communities in Asia. Bamboo is a versatile building material that is strong, renewable, and sustainable. Traditional bamboo construction techniques are highlighted that use locally available materials efficiently. The document aims to spread knowledge of bamboo construction to support affordable, sustainable housing where bamboo is available.
Andaman and nicobar houses (vernacular architecture india)Mudra Redkar
Vernacular or traditional architecture of the natives from the islands.
Completely based on climatology and geographically available materials.
Different construction and dwelling patterns as per the various landscapes of these islands.
Constructions also based on the different religions of tribes.
Jane Dillard built an unusual home made entirely of straw bales near Cortez, Colorado. Her thick straw bale walls provide an efficient, naturally cool home that is quiet and feels safe. Straw bale construction is gaining popularity in the American Southwest as a sustainable building technique that uses a local, renewable material and blends well with the natural surroundings. Modern interest in straw bale homes has grown due to desires for energy efficiency, use of natural materials, and a feeling of belonging provided by understanding the simple materials that form one's home.
The document summarizes different types of traditional structures that use organic materials like wood, bamboo, reeds, and grass as the primary building material. It describes pole structures used by cultures like those in Fiji and Mexico. It also outlines post and beam construction, horizontal log structures, and timber framed structures used in places like the US, England, and India. Bamboo structures of villages in Cameroon are detailed. Reed and grass structures of tribes in Iraq, Bolivia, and South Africa are also summarized.
Hospitality is the friendly and welcoming behaviour towards guests. Frequently it
includes sharing food and drink (and accommodation) and in doing so establishing
and maintaining relationships. Mennel et al (1992), following Van Gennep, suggest
that sharing food is held to signify togetherness, an equivalence among a group that
defines and reaffirms insiders as socially similar. Lashley suggests that in the private
domain, the sharing of food and drink between hosts and guests is based on mutual
obligations and on reciprocity “ the guests becomes a host on another
Indigenous architecture is developed based on the needs and available resources of a region, with a distinctive relation to the local culture, society, and environment. Settlement patterns are influenced by both human factors like social organization and natural factors like climate and location. Indigenous architecture represents an amalgamation of these human and natural factors, with the character of settlements often defined by communities of buildings rather than single structures.
Bamboo is widely used as a building material throughout Latin America, where it has a long history. Approximately 11 million hectares in South America are covered by bamboo forests, which contain 31% of bamboo genera and 39% of species worldwide. Bamboo was commonly used in housing construction in Colombia and other countries. Traditional building techniques include using bamboo for walls, beams, scaffolding, and other structural elements. Bamboo provides sustainable and affordable building options but also is used innovatively in high-end, large-scale projects by architects in the region.
This document discusses changes in architecture over time from vernacular to high-style and popular architecture. It notes that hierarchies within societies became less prominent as linear concepts of time prioritized progress. Nature became less sacred and human relationships to land were dehumanized. Cultural beliefs and building forms became more complex and divorced. Vernacular architecture suited local needs and contexts using local materials, while high-style relied more on aesthetics for elites. Popular architecture reflects public values more closely. Western concepts don't always suit other cultures, and excessive choice breaks down folk arts. Symbolic values and behaviors still influence housing forms in developed countries, showing architecture is still connected to culture even if divorced from traditional frameworks.
Wooden frame houses in Germany use wooden frames, bricks for walls, and ceramic roof tiles. Gel houses in Mongolia are portable nomadic dwellings used by herders, with a wool-filled cloth covering over a wooden pole framework. Houses in southern Morocco are made of sun-dried clay bricks mixed with water and molded, then assembled and plastered with clay. Native American tepees were portable cone-shaped tents carried on horses, covered with buffalo hides or canvas, and used for hunting or festivals. Batak houses in Indonesia are built on stilts with colorful ornamentation meant to ward off evil spirits.
Wooden frame houses in Germany use wooden frames, bricks for walls, and ceramic roof tiles. Gel houses in Mongolia are portable nomadic dwellings used by herders, with a wool-filled cloth covering over a wooden pole framework. Houses in southern Morocco are made of sun-dried clay bricks mixed with water and molded, then assembled and plastered with clay. Native American tepees were portable cone-shaped tents carried on horses, covered with buffalo hides or canvas, and used for hunting or festivals. Batak houses in Indonesia are stilt houses with ornamental carvings meant to ward off evil, using natural red, white, and black pigments representing the cosmic spheres.
The site must be cleared of any vegetation and debris, then leveled and graded to prepare for construction. Spoil from trenching and leveling will be stockpiled on site. Damp proof courses and termite protection will be installed before pouring the ground floor slab.
The document summarizes the evolution of traditional house types in the Batanes Islands of the Philippines. It describes two major house archetypes: wood-and-thatch structures and lime-stone-wood-and-thatch structures. The wood-and-thatch structures evolved from simple lean-to shelters into slightly larger structures used for storage or cooking. The lime-stone-wood-and-thatch structures represent the most advanced house type, using stone walls for larger, two-story living quarters able to withstand the region's extreme weather. The document outlines the progression of house types over time in response to climate and foreign influences.
This document provides background information on longleaf pine ecosystems and describes a study conducted at Oak Mountain State Park in Alabama. It discusses how longleaf pine ecosystems used to dominate the southeastern US but were largely destroyed by logging and fire suppression. The study aimed to better understand montane longleaf pine ecosystems by examining relationships between environmental variables, juvenile pine abundance, and adult pine basal area across foothill and mountain slope sites. It hypothesized that variables like decreased soil depth and increased slope or tree competition would negatively impact pine recruitment and growth. The document outlines the environmental variables measured, including canopy openness, slope, and soil depth.
Fire Intensity Effects on Coastal Redwood RegenerationAxël Eaton
This study examined the relationship between fire severity and basal sprouting in coastal redwood trees in Big Creek Reserve, California. The researchers measured 112 redwood trees and classified burn severity. They found coastal redwoods produced more basal sprouts with increasing burn severity, as measured by char height and the presence of goosepens. Even after accounting for tree size, higher burn severity was correlated with greater sprouting. This response may be due to increased light availability or redirection of nutrients after severe burning. The findings suggest forest management could use controlled burning to reduce fuels while stimulating redwood regeneration to conserve the species in the face of climate change.
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This document provides an abstract and table of contents for a master's dissertation focused on saving space with furniture design. The dissertation examines worldwide micro living and traditional Japanese homes as case studies. It aims to find solutions to relieve populations from household chores and the need for space through space-saving furniture design, with a focus on storage design. The research will present case studies on storage solutions, micro home interiors, and habits from traditional Japanese homes, which emphasized bare spaces and floor sitting. It will also compare Western and Japanese furniture history. Surveys and literature reviews will help identify problems with home interiors. The conclusions will provide furniture concepts and layouts combining global lifestyles and values, considering solutions for Western housing integration and accessibility
ARCHITECTURE HISTORY OF MALAYSIA HOUSES Ali Alakhram
Traditional Malay houses are built on stilts using timber with joints held together by wooden wedges without nails. They have steep, overhanging roofs and are divided into areas for different activities. Houses typically have a main house and separate kitchen, and one or more verandas. Construction methods allow houses to be dismantled and rebuilt elsewhere. Roof materials have changed from thatch to metal over time.
Bamboo is one of the fastest growing plants and has many uses. It grows widely in Asia and Latin America. There are over 1600 bamboo species. Bamboo can be used for construction, tools, and food. It is strong yet lightweight. Cultures in Asia have long used bamboo for buildings, bridges, and tools. Modern uses include reinforcement in concrete and refugee housing with sustainable designs that utilize local bamboo.
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The document summarizes different types of traditional living spaces from around the world. It describes the vale houses of Fiji which have high-pitched roofs to withstand storms. The interior is divided into public and private zones. It also describes Tswana houses from Botswana which comprise several circular huts within a central enclosed yard, with different huts serving functions like sleeping, cooking, and storage. Floor plans and interior furnishings of the huts are also outlined. Key factors that influence dwelling forms like family structure, gender roles, and social interaction are discussed.
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Hospitality is the friendly and welcoming behaviour towards guests. Frequently it
includes sharing food and drink (and accommodation) and in doing so establishing
and maintaining relationships. Mennel et al (1992), following Van Gennep, suggest
that sharing food is held to signify togetherness, an equivalence among a group that
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domain, the sharing of food and drink between hosts and guests is based on mutual
obligations and on reciprocity “ the guests becomes a host on another
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This document discusses changes in architecture over time from vernacular to high-style and popular architecture. It notes that hierarchies within societies became less prominent as linear concepts of time prioritized progress. Nature became less sacred and human relationships to land were dehumanized. Cultural beliefs and building forms became more complex and divorced. Vernacular architecture suited local needs and contexts using local materials, while high-style relied more on aesthetics for elites. Popular architecture reflects public values more closely. Western concepts don't always suit other cultures, and excessive choice breaks down folk arts. Symbolic values and behaviors still influence housing forms in developed countries, showing architecture is still connected to culture even if divorced from traditional frameworks.
Wooden frame houses in Germany use wooden frames, bricks for walls, and ceramic roof tiles. Gel houses in Mongolia are portable nomadic dwellings used by herders, with a wool-filled cloth covering over a wooden pole framework. Houses in southern Morocco are made of sun-dried clay bricks mixed with water and molded, then assembled and plastered with clay. Native American tepees were portable cone-shaped tents carried on horses, covered with buffalo hides or canvas, and used for hunting or festivals. Batak houses in Indonesia are built on stilts with colorful ornamentation meant to ward off evil spirits.
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Western ‘architectural’ ideology and its impact on the traditional building practices of the maya peoples of guatemala and southern mexico
1. ADDITIONS to architectural history
XIXth conference of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand, Brisbane: SAHANZ, 2002
Western ‘Architectural’ Ideology and its
Impact on the Traditional Building
Practices of the Maya Peoples of Guatemala
and Southern Mexico
Department of Architecture
The University of Queensland
Chozas, or traditional Maya dwellings, in contemporary Guatemala and
southern Mexico signify, to Maya and non-Maya alike, poverty and
depression. They also stand as historical reminders to a time past but not
forgotten. They embody traditional cultural knowledge related to belief,
behaviours and products of Maya culture and are intimately linked to the
land, materials and climate of the region. Research has also linked the
Maya house to mythological beliefs regarding humankind’s relationship to
the universe. The current author’s research has shown that no matter how
much change ‘seems’ to have occurred in the way people construct their
environment, the behaviour associated with any type of dwelling still has its
basis in the traditional.
The question is, can ‘traditional’ building practices synthesise with non-
traditional methods of construction in enabling Western practitioners to
design culturally appropriate small-scale public housing in non-Western
and Indigenous built environments? This paper responds by comparing the
housing traditions of the Maya peoples of Guatemala and southern Mexico
to the non-traditional housing provided by a Western change agency within
the region. The purpose is to illustrate the negative influence that such
‘Western-directed’ change is having on the traditional housing of the
region. The significance of this analysis is to establish ways in which it is
possible to synthesise the traditional and non-traditional for culturally
appropriate housing programs in Guatemala and southern Mexico –
establishing ways in which Western understanding ‘could’ be relevant.
2. ADDITIONS ⁄
Introduction
Do Western ideologies and concepts of architecture hold relevance for non-Western and
Indigenous building traditions and environments? Does Western theoretical discourse
reinforce Western-centric belief systems to the detriment of non-Western and Indigenous
traditions regarding building methods and their related behavioural systems?
The aim of this paper is to challenge the relevance of Western concepts of ‘house’
(‘architecture’) which influence building ‘change’ in non-Western and Indigenous
traditional environments, and in so doing propose a way in which the application of such
ideologies ‘could’ hold relevance in the built environments of the study region. The author
will use findings from empirical analysis1
conducted in Central America to show that
Western concepts of ‘what makes a house’ are directly responsible for culturally
inappropriate public housing for the Indigenous peoples of the region. The paper is
structured, firstly, to provide a contemporary model of three regionally specific, traditional
Maya dwelling types; secondly, to discuss the influences underscoring the building
‘change’ associated with such traditional housing types; and thirdly, to compare a
Western-directed housing project of the study region to traditional Maya housing. Finally,
based on the empirical findings presented, the conclusion of the paper examines ways in
which the application of Western architectural ideologies ‘could’ hold relevance to Maya
(non-Western and Indigenous) built environments.
Maya Housing Traditions and Regional Differences
Traditions are a …set of social practices which seek to celebrate and inculcate
certain behavioural norms and values, implying continuity with a real or imagined
past, and usually associated with widely accepted rituals or other forms of
symbolic behaviour.2
The term ‘traditional’ when used in reference to Maya dwellings implies a number of
different things within the study region itself. In Spanish, the predominant language
spoken throughout the region, such houses are referred to as: ranchos (farm houses),
chozas, casas de paja (thatch houses), and casas de los antiguos (old houses or ‘houses of
the ancients’), and finally, casas de los pobres (‘houses of the poor’). These terms are
regionally and culturally specific. The Guatemalan geography, ecology, and climate vary
greatly and in accordance with this so do the local Maya building ‘traditions’. The term
‘traditional’, therefore, when used in this paper, refers to those Maya houses or dwellings
constructed using thatch, be it grass (paja, pajon), wheat stalks (trigo), sugarcane-leaf
(hoja de caña), corn-leaf (hoja de maize) or a number of different types of palm frond
(ah’hij, guano, manoco or zacate) as a roofing material. Such dwellings also make use of
either adobe (tierra), timber battening (bahareke), sugar cane (caña) and corn stalks (caña
3. ADDITIONS ⁄
de milpa) as wall treatment, with any of these materials being used in conjunction with
another.
There are three distinct geographical/ecological zones within the Guatemalan region.
These areas are designated as the Highlands, Intermediate Highlands, and Lowlands. The
Highlands (2000m to above 3500m), known locally as tierra fria (cold country), are
characterised by isolated terrain with high ridges and deep gorges wherein annual
temperatures range from between 3° and 17° Celsius. The Intermediate Highlands (1000m
to 2000m), or tierra templada (temperate climate), are characterised by areas that range
from wet to dry and are heavily forested with pines and oaks at the lower elevations,
temperate rainforest at the higher, temperatures range between 17° and 22° Celsius. The
Lowlands (below 1000m), or tierra caliente (hot country), are characterised by a hot,
humid climate and tropical broadleaf rainforest wherein annual temperatures range from
between 22° and 35° Celsius. Humidity levels in the Lowlands are generally between 75
percent and 90 percent year round.3
Within the three zones/areas, three distinct
traditional Maya housing types exist of which the author has surveyed and documented
thirty-six different housing variations.
The traditional Maya housing type found in the Highlands area is of a square/rectangular
plan form measuring roughly 5 metres by 7 metres with an overall height to the underside
of the ridge beam of between 5 and 6 metres. Such houses incorporate thick adobe walls of
approximately 300 to 400 millimetres in width with a thick paja or pajon (two different
types of local grass) as the main roofing element. Pajon is thicker and longer than paja and
is preferred in usage as roofing material as it enables greater protection due to its thicker
cross-sectional area, it also has a longer life expectancy. The roof structure is
predominantly constructed using pino de cipres (cypress pine), and is simply supported
onto four okones (posts) and the adobe walls below. The adobe walls are usually made with
small horizontal and vertical timber poles within which the earth is inlaid. The walls are
generally finished by overlaying a finer earthen mixture which resembles plaster.
The traditional housing type commonly found in the Intermediate Highlands is of a
rectangular plan form measuring roughly 4 metres by 7 metres with an overall height to
the underside of the ridge beam of between 4.5 and 5 metres. These houses utilise either
hoja de caña (sugarcane leaf), hoja de maize (corn-leaf) or palma de ah’hij (a variety of
temperate local palm) as the main roofing material. The roof structure utilises a number of
locally available timbers, sourced predominantly from either pino de cipres (cypress pine),
cedro (cedar) and coaba (mahogany). The roof structure, in a similar manner to the
Highlands region, is simply supported onto four okones (posts). The wall construction in
this region varies from a light lattice-work of caña (sugarcane stalks) in the lower altitudes
to an adobe-type construction in the higher altitudes. There is also evidence of bahareke
4. ADDITIONS ⁄
(vertical timber battening overlaid/inlaid with earth) being utilised as wall finishing in
certain areas.
The traditional Maya house form that predominates in the Lowlands region is of a
rectangular plan measuring roughly 4 metres by 8 metres with an overall height to the
underside of the ridge beam of between 4 and 4.5 metres. These houses utilise a number of
different local palm varieties as roofing material. There are three distinct palm species
used as roofing material in the Lowlands region, the guano, the manoco and the zacate.
The roof structure primarily uses a local variety of cedro (cedar). The four okones (posts)
are again present as the primary roof supports. The wall construction throughout the
region varies according to available materials and climatic conditions. In the northern
Yucatan area (southern Mexico) it is common to find houses utilising a variety of different
wall finishes, ranging from sascab (a local form of limestone), bahareke and pak luum (a
composite material utilising a light timber lattice frame which is then covered by earth).
Maya Housing Traditions and Regional Commonalities
The outcomes of the regional housing survey have been that the author has devised a
model of a traditional Maya house complex, which is common to most
ecological/geographical areas of the region. Such commonalities relate to environmental
responses, availability of materials, behavioural patterns and usage, mythological beliefs,
settlement patterning and construction methods and practices. These common elements
are the base from which all culturally and regionally specific variations diverge. They are
the nucleus of the traditional Maya house.
A typical Maya house complex consists of from one to three small buildings: a
cooking/eating building, a sleeping building, and a storage building. Other common
constructions within the family compound include chicken coops, pigsties, granaries,
sheep corrals, and sweat baths. There are variations within this model which depend upon
the physical characteristics of the site and the economic situation of the inhabitants. When
this is the case, the structures tend to serve multiple functions. For example, in a number
of areas the storage and drying of crops such as maize (corn) and frijoles (beans) is
serviced within the roof space of the cooking/sleeping house itself, negating the need for a
separate storage building. The house complex in the Highlands and at times, the
Intermediate Highlands, incorporates a sweat bath built adjacent to the main
cooking/sleeping structure. The Maya house, as observed throughout the region, typically
consists of a hard-packed dirt floor upon which an open-earth oven or fire-pit is placed.
The typical method of tie-down for all timber and thatch elements within the traditional
dwelling is termed vejuco. This method utilises the bark of a number of locally available
trees, as well as the internal fibres of the mecate or agave cactus. The method used to
5. ADDITIONS ⁄
prepare the tie-down is to soak the material for three to four days and then apply it to the
timber joint whilst wet. The material shrinks as it dries and provides a stable joint
connection. It has been shown, through local oral accounts that such jointing is excellent
for maintaining a stable structure during earthquakes (prevalent throughout the Central
American region) as the joints are flexible and enable sufficient movement while
preventing the building from collapsing.
Anthropological research conducted in the 1960s and 1970s has linked the Maya belief
system to mythology regarding humankind’s relationship to the universe.4
This fact is also
evident in the current investigation in that there are a number of elements within the
traditional house which relate to specific beliefs associated with house layout,
construction and material usage. For example, the four okones (posts) present in all
traditional dwellings refer in Maya mythology to the four cardinal points on the earth’s
surface, thus connecting the house/humankind to el corazon de la tierra, the ‘heart of the
earth’. The open fireplace observed in all traditional Maya dwellings relates directly to
mythology, in that the three main stones, which comprise the fireplace, refer to one of the
star constellations situated above the Maya region. The stones have been arranged in a
similar manner to the constellation so as to represent the connection between the
house/humankind and el corazon del cielo, the ‘heart of the universe’.
One further ‘tradition’ common to all Maya housing types and variations relates directly to
material usage and construction. This concerns the cutting of timbers on the night of the
full moon of each month. As observed through local oral accounts, this is done to utilise
the gravitational forces of the full moon which affect the timber in a similar way to that of
the tides of the earth’s oceans. Through such a method, the timber is found to last longer,
be physically stronger and is more resistant to pests. The explanation for this relates to the
fact that during the full moon there is increased moisture within the tree and that if cut at
this time, the density of the wood increases as it dries. Due to the increased strength of the
timber it is then able to be passed down familial lines as part of the inheritance system.
In describing a typical Tzotzil Maya housing complex from the municipio (municipality) of
Zinacantan, in the State of Chiapas, Mexico, Vogt illustrates another commonly seen
aspect of contemporary Maya behaviour patterns associated with traditional dwellings.
House plots are normally inherited by the sons of the family head, and women
move into the compounds of their husbands. Houses are usually rectangular, one
room constructions. The traditional house had wattle-and-daub walls and a steep,
four-sided roof, thatched with grass. Modern houses are of adobe brick or cinder
block roofed with tile. The fire…is located on the floor, normally toward the
setting-sun side of the house, the domain of the women. The men’s domain,
6. ADDITIONS ⁄
which is toward the rising sun, is where they kept their belongings and sometimes
set up an altar containing images or pictures of saints.5
According to the current author’s survey, most Maya communities throughout the region
follow a similar settlement patterning. There is usually one larger municipal town or
cabacera (head town), which forms the ceremonial and political centre for the region. This
town is usually comprised of a church, a town hall, and a marketplace. The streets radiate
out from the central square in a grid pattern. Most Maya aldeas (villages) are found within
the immediate territorial surrounds of these socio-political town centres. Within these
small communities, people often live in extended family compounds so as to be close to
their immediate kin. There is a tendency also to cluster family dwellings. This form of
contemporary settlement patterning has been shown, in a number of contemporary
archaeological accounts, to resemble pre-Conquest settlement patterns.6
The intention until this point in the paper has been to alert the reader to the diverse nature
and cultural richness with which the traditional Maya house is imbued. As mentioned
previously, among the three main regional housing ‘types’ there is diversity with no two
language groups maintaining the same house form. Each house, whether it is of a principle
language group, or dialect, reflects its own regional identity, as can similarly be observed
in the wide variety of regional traditional Maya dress. The outcomes of the regional survey
have been to recognise the cultural and regional specificity of these houses, as they
embody traditional cultural knowledge related to the beliefs, behaviours and products of
Maya cultures and which are intimately linked to the land, materials and ecology of the
region. No two dwellings are alike as each dwelling is flexible in function so as to
accommodate the individual desires and motivations of the owner.
The Current Situation Regarding Traditional Maya Houses
As with most Indigenous and non-Western environments throughout the world, there has
been a great deal of change in contemporary Maya socio-cultural environments. It is this
aspect of ‘change’ which interests the author the most – how such ‘change’ has affected
the building traditions of the region? In order to understand this, the author conducted a
series of interviews which were presented to local ‘interviewees’ in all twenty-eight Maya
language regions. The outcomes of this regional survey have demonstrated that influences
of building change are culturally, as well as regionally, specific. One is not able to
understand such change by simply looking for commonalities amongst language groups.
For the reader’s benefit the author will list these influences, however, for the purposes of
the length of this paper, these points will not be discussed in any further detail. The major
reasons/influences underscoring change to the building traditions of the study region are
as follows:
7. ADDITIONS ⁄
Economic Realities
Changing Cultural/Status Values
Military Involvement
Population Increases and Pressures
Emigration
Religious Influence
Directed Change Programs
Personal Choice
Environmental Degradation
Environmental Catastrophes
Health
Changing Technologies
Chozas (traditional Maya houses), in contemporary Guatemala represent, to Maya and
non-Maya alike, poverty and depression.7
They are commonly known in the region as,
casas de los pobres, or ‘houses of the poor’, and now stand as historical reminders of a time
past.8
Most of the houses examined during the author’s regional survey were either the last
of their kind, being inhabited by an elderly Maya couple which refused to move to another
dwelling, or were inhabited by an extremely poor family which did not have the monetary
resources to join the change process by buying contemporary building materials. The
predominant house form throughout the region is no longer that of timber and thatch, it is
concrete block and corrugated tin. In terms of social status, corrugated tin has now
become the material of choice. It now signifies higher economic status, social progress and
personal/familial development.9
One important fact evident from both the documentation and the interview processes is
that there is still adherence to traditional behaviour patterns among the majority of
contemporary Maya householders, be they residing in concrete block and sheet iron or
adobe brick and terracotta tile dwellings.
A Western-directed Housing Project: Habitat for Humanity
One of the major influences of building change as seen from the list outlined in the
previous section, has been that of directed change programs. Currently, within Guatemala
there are presently a number of Western organisations working directly with culture
‘change’. The majority of these have a religious orientation and work in many different
arenas, from linguistics to women’s health. For the purposes of this paper, the author
decided to conduct an investigation into the largest Western directed public housing
program in Guatemala, known as ‘Habitat for Humanity’. The Habitat for Humanity10
housing project is a Christian organisation, which to date (August 2002) has been
responsible for the construction of over 12,000 concrete and tin houses serving over 80,000
8. ADDITIONS ⁄
people throughout Guatemala. The organisation is planning to construct another 13,000
houses before the year 2005. Over 4000 such houses were constructed in Guatemala in the
last two years (2000-2001).11
In accordance with this investigation, a series of interviews related to post-occupancy
evaluations were conducted with recipients12
of Habitat for Humanity houses. The main
intention of these interviews was to establish whether or not, the Western concept of
house (through such directed housing schemes) was (or could be) culturally appropriate
and whether it enhanced or impacted negatively on the quality of lifestyle of the Maya
residents.
The main goals of the Habitat housing project are to provide houses which ‘transform
lives’ in establishing a ‘greater sense of personal dignity’, ‘self-esteem’, ‘social tolerance’,
‘cultural reconciliation’, and ‘hope’ in ‘uniting the community’ and ‘constructing peace’.13
According to the official publication of Habitat for Humanity International, the following
(Western-defined) values are attributed to its housing provision: ‘secure’ housing forges a
‘sense of hope’; a ‘decent’ house brings ‘simple joys’; habitat housing as a ‘beacon’ for
families; ‘transient life’ a thing of the ‘past’; habitat housing ‘yielding stability’; habitat
housing ‘improving a person’s mindset’; a ‘decent’ house improving ‘health’ and ‘offering
tranquillity’; and finally, from the director of the project himself, the habitat project
‘renews minds’ and ‘transforms lives’.14
The typical form of the Habitat House, is 50 square metres, consisting of four rooms, two
steel doors and four steel-framed glass windows, the walls are made of solid core-filled
concrete block, the floors are concrete and the roof sheeting is corrugated tin. The current
house price is roughly 12,000 Quetzals or approximately $3,000 Australian Dollars, as
compared to an average price of less than $1,000 Australian Dollars for a traditional
dwelling.15
One of the most advantageous aspects of the Habitat for Humanity project is
that poor local people, usually the indigenous Maya, can purchase a house without
needing lump-sum monies before construction begins. Another major advantage of the
Habitat for Humanity project, as seen through interviews, is that it enables the house
owners to make monthly repayments without accruing interest on the original cost of the
house.16
The majority of interviewees enjoyed having a new house, which offered financial and
personal security, and gave them a heightened sense of social status.17
However, due to
the lack of regional and environmental specificity in housing design, there were some
fundamental complaints. The houses performed poorly under climatic extremes being too
hot internally in summer and too cold internally during winter.
9. ADDITIONS ⁄
When considered from a cultural perspective, the houses also performed poorly. For
example, before construction begins on a house, the recipients are required to sign a
contract which binds them to a number of fundamental (Western-defined) rules.18
These
rules are climatically, as well as culturally, inappropriate. In accordance with the rules
stated in the housing contract, ‘recipients’ are not permitted to plaster, paint or attach
sun-shading devices on the house until completing house payments (which may take up
to seven or eight years). They are not permitted to dry and store corn or beans (the local
staple) in the traditional manner which consisted of laying it under the roofing material
(previously thatch) – tin roof sheeting fails to provide the necessary heat protection
needed to dry the crop evenly.19
A further major problem with such dwellings was that
recipients were not permitted to cook in the traditional manner within the house, thus,
requiring the kitchen to be outside in another small building, usually a thatch dwelling.
The major reason being that the action of the soot from the smoke corrodes the corrugated
iron within a few years which then needs to be replaced.
Due to the cultural and climatic inappropriateness of such a project there appeared to be
no substantial improvement in the living conditions of the residents. When asked what
their general feelings were about the project, the majority of residents answered that they
were happy with the system of payment (not needing monies up front to build), but were
unhappy about not being allowed to modify certain aspects of their house. This resulted in
the house being under-utilised leading to no definitive change in the living conditions
which they had lived in prior to receiving the Habitat house.
The Habitat for Humanity housing project, in comparison to the author’s regional survey
of traditional Maya housing, is insensitive, misguided and culturally inappropriate. The
program ignores many traditional methods and behaviours associated with traditional
dwellings. The only advantageous aspect of the program was that people were able to
purchase something to which they had had no access to previously – secure housing. The
problems with such housing far outweigh the benefits, people are still living in poverty, the
only difference is that they now have a different house in which they have to ‘transform’
and ‘change’ in order to ‘fit’, rather than a house which is modified to ‘fit’ their behaviours
and methods of living.
Culturally Appropriate Housing: Is it possible?
This paper began by asking the question of whether or not Western concepts of
architecture could hold relevance for Maya (non-Western and Indigenous) built fabric and
environments? In answering this, the above critique compared the results of a post-
occupancy evaluation of a contemporary Western-directed housing program to the
traditional housing practices of the region. The outcome of this inquiry was that Western-
centric practitioners placed value on aspects, of non-Western and Indigenous built fabric,
10. ADDITIONS ⁄
which are not relevant to the traditional needs of the cultural environments in which they
are situated. This attitude and method of application was criticised by the current author
as lacking consideration and respect for Maya traditional cultural values. Is the provision
of culturally appropriate, small-scale public housing possible in non-Western
environments, when attempted by Western building practitioners? If the previous
investigation regarding Habitat housing is any guide, the answer would be no.
However, if one was to execute such housing provision in terms of appropriate
consultation techniques which draws on culturally appropriate models of household
behaviour, then it should be possible to design an intermediate dwelling; a regionally and
culturally specific prototype house, which incorporates the advantageous aspects of both,
the traditional and the non-traditional. What is of the greatest importance in such action is
for Maya peoples to have agency in the construction of their own building traditions and
cultural identities.
What are the ways in which this is possible? As seen through the analysis conducted in this
paper, there are a number of practical necessities and pragmatic solutions available
contained in the traditional to afford the provision of appropriate house design in the
contemporary era. However, as seen also through the research presented above, the
traditional no longer presents a viable option, due to the change in societal values and
social status associated with such traditions. The traditional house no longer holds cultural
relevance for the Maya peoples of the 2000s in regards to appropriate and efficient
housing. With this in mind, the author developed and initiated a proposal for the provision
of small-scale public housing which takes the traditional as its basis in design but also
utilises the advantageous aspects of the non-traditional.
The project, called Waqi’ Kej, aims at using the findings from empirical analysis
(documentation and interviews) as presented in this paper and the author’s PhD thesis.
The name is a Kaqchikel Maya phrase which relates to the day of the Maya calendar on
which the housing project is to formally begin in 2003. The name signifies the connection
between the ‘heart of the universe’, the ‘heart of the earth’ and the four cardinal points of
the earth’s surface, as shown in the traditional house by the four okones or posts and the
hearth. The project will attempt to produce a ‘prototype’ dwelling which is regionally and
culturally specific. As illustrated previously, there are more than thirty-six different
traditional housing variations, which exist within the twenty-eight language groups of the
region, each of these variations easily forming the basis for prototypical housing.
The aim of the project is to produce earthquake resistant housing, which meets the level
and status of the ‘new’ without losing connection with the ‘old’ – the traditional; a project
which utilises traditional methods of construction and is based on the behavioural
patterns, beliefs and usages attributed to the traditional.
11. ADDITIONS ⁄
Elements such as the drying of dietary staples within the roof space of the house, the
retention of the okon (post) system as a reference to mythology, the retention of traditional
wall construction systems (earthquake resistant) and methods of tie-down will enable the
continuation of traditional value systems. Added to these are elements of contemporary
necessity such as cisterns for potable water, external dry toilets and adobe block stoves
which trap heat instead of the open fireplace system which uses large quantities of wood.
Housing will be provided in a manner which the poor do not need to spend eight years of
their life tied to a mortgage. It is housing which people can modify and change in bettering
the process, where the house ‘fits’ individual desires.
Conclusion
The importance of questioning the relevance of Western concepts of ‘house’ and
‘architecture’ to non-Western and Indigenous environments becomes evident when one
views the statistics regarding Guatemala’s current housing problems. It was estimated in a
recent study conducted by the Centro de Estudios Urbanos y Rurales (Urban and Rural
Studies Centre) of the University of San Carlos in Guatemala City, that throughout
Guatemala there are between 1 million and 1.5 million people needing housing
assistance.20
Out of a population of just over twelve million, the majority of which are
Indigenous, one can see the importance of appropriate housing.
James Davidson is currently a PhD student at the University of Queensland. He graduated from UQ with a
Bachelor of Architecture (Hons 1) in 1999. His current research concerns producing a contemporary regional survey
of the change associated with traditional Maya housing typologies of the Central American region.
james.davidson@mailbox.uq.edu.au
12. ADDITIONS ⁄
Figure 1: Image of Ch’orti’ Maya traditional dwelling from the Tunuco Abajo community in the Chiquimula
department of eastern Guatemala.
13. ADDITIONS ⁄
Figure 2: Image of Habitat for Humanity housing from the Poqomchi community in the department of Alta
Verapaz of northern Guatemala.
1. The author’s PhD study program focuses on documenting, using Western architectural techniques, the
thirty-six traditional dwellings of the twenty-eight existing language groups of the Maya peoples of
Guatemala and southern Mexico (presented in section 1 of this paper). In conjunction with this investigation
the author has also conducted research into the influences underscoring the ‘change’ associated with such
dwellings over the last fifty to one hundred years (section 2).
2. G. Marshall (ed.), A Dictionary of Sociology, 2nd
Edition, New York: Oxford University Press, 1998, p. 672.
3. Carlos Gispert, Atlas de Guatemala, Barcelona: MMI Oceano Grupo Editorial, 2001, p. X.
4. Evon Z Vogt, The Zinacantecos of Mexico: A Modern Maya Way of Life, New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston,
1970.
5. Evon Z Vogt, ‘Tzotzil of Zinacantan,’ in James W Dowe (ed), Encyclopaedia of World Cultures Volume III
Middle America and the Caribbean, New York: G.K. Hall & Company, 1996, pp. 291-295.
6. Ian Mast, ‘Poqomam,’ in James W Dowe (ed), Encyclopaedia of World Cultures Volume III Middle America
and the Caribbean, New York: G.K. Hall & Company, 1996, pp. 217-219.
7. These opinions were recorded during interviews with ‘interviewees’ whilst conducting the regional housing
survey.
8. The majority of Maya interviewees believed that their traditional housing held little benefit for them and were
looked upon as atrasos, or ‘backwards’.
9. This fact was recorded during interviews with ‘interviewees’ whilst conducting the regional housing survey.
10. Habitat for Humanity International was established in the United States of America in 1976 as a way to
provide poor people with sufficient housing; the housing project is now present in over 83 countries. In 1979,
the Habitat for Humanity project began in Guatemala in the Highlands town of Aguacatán. It now has a
presence in 11 out of the 22 departamentos, or states, of Guatemala.
11. Official statistics provided by Habitat for Humanity at the Quetzaltenango, Guatemala office on 21 May 2002.
14. ADDITIONS ⁄
12. The majority of interviewees had previously lived in a traditional Maya dwelling.
13. Official literature provided by Habitat for Humanity at the Quetzaltenango, Guatemala office on 21 May 2002.
14. These points (in inverted commas) are all article headings in the April/May 2002 edition of “Habitat World”,
the official publication of Habitat for Humanity International.
15. This fact is the main reason for people viewing traditional dwellings as the realm of the poor, the actual value
of such a house does not increase over time, however, the Habitat house is expected to do so.
16. The majority of Habitat recipients see this as the main advantage in purchasing a Habitat house; it takes on
average eight years for a family to complete payments on their house.
17. Security is a major problem with traditional houses and this was reflected in the findings from both series of
interviews.
18. Evidence of this was shown to the author by the majority of interviewees who produced the contract showing
the list of requirements by which they are bound.
19. It has also been noted that due to the excessive amounts of heat the tin roof fails also to protect the maize
from the palomia moth which destroys the corn in a matter of months without relying on pesticides which
are expensive.
20. Francisco Martinez, “Falta Más Que Un Millón de Viviendas”, Guatemala: Prensa Libre, Sunday, 29th
August,
1999.