Building with mud and steel frames is an interesting hybrid between industrial and non-industrial technologies. Two examples:
“Kazakh architect and artist Saken Narynov created a superstructure able to host what we could call an adobe vertical city. In fact, the structure is used as a matrix that can be more or less densely filled with multifamily habitation units. The traditional earth based material thus hybrids with the steel structure in a very unusual and interesting way and the space resulting between the habitation units and the structure is beautifully occupied by mazes of staircases and elevated pathways.”
“The design recalls recent works by the Chilean architect Marcelo Cortes, who employs a steel meshwork onto which mud is sprayed, but on a far greater scale. Cortes has developed a “quincha metalica”, a form of traditional quincha construction (mud and straw packed between a bamboo or wood frame) that uses a steel frame work.”
Picture above: Saken Narynov
Picture above: Saken Narynov
Picture above: Saken Narynov
Picture above: Saken Narynov
Picture above: Marcelo Cortes
Picture above: Marcelo Cortes
Picture above: Marcelo Cortes
Building a traditional quincha house.
Via Funambulist & Earth Architecture.
Related:
- Building with pumice
- How to build a reciprocal roof frame
- How to build an earthbag dome
- Covered bridges: how to build and rebuild them
- Wooden pipelines
- Architecture for the poor: Hassan Fathy online
- The Blackfoot Indians