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  2. Rammed earth - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rammed_earth

    The ruins of a Han dynasty (202 BCE – 220 CE) Chinese watchtower made of rammed earth in Dunhuang, Province of Gansu, China, at the eastern end of the Silk Road. Rammed earth is a technique for constructing foundations, floors, and walls using compacted natural raw materials such as earth, chalk, lime, or gravel. [1]

  3. Earth structure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_structure

    Old school built of rammed earth in 1836–37 in Bonbaden, Hesse, Germany. Rammed earth is a technique for building walls using natural raw materials such as earth, chalk, lime or gravel. A rammed earth wall is built by placing damp soil in a temporary form. The soil is manually or mechanically compacted and then the form is removed. [23]

  4. Joseph Steffens House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Steffens_House

    Settler Joseph Steffens built the rammed earth house in 1843; it is the only surviving rammed earth house in the state. Rammed earth construction uses soil to build walls by pressurizing it in molds; the method was common in continental Europe and saw some use in 18th-century eastern America and in the Great Plains and Southwest during the ...

  5. John Gillin Residence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Gillin_Residence

    View of the house and pool, 1957. The John Gillin Residence is a large single-story Usonian house, designed by Frank Lloyd Wright in 1950 and built in Dallas, Texas, in 1958.

  6. Hakka walled village - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hakka_walled_village

    An interior view. Hakka walled villages can be constructed from brick, stone, or rammed earth, with the last being the most common.The external wall is typically 1 metre (3 ft) in thickness and the entire building could be up to three or four stories in height.

  7. Alker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alker

    Alker is an earth-based stabilized building material produced by the addition of gypsum, lime, and water to earth with the appropriate granulometric structure and with a cohesive property. Unbaked and produced on-site either as adobe blocks or by pouring into mouldings (the rammed earth technique), it has significant economical and ecological ...

  8. Earth shelter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earth_shelter

    An earth sheltered house in Switzerland (Peter Vetsch) An earth shelter, also called an earth house, earth-bermed house, earth-sheltered house, [1] earth-covered house, or underground house, is a structure (usually a house) with earth against the walls and/or on the roof, or that is entirely buried underground.

  9. Earthship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earthship

    The outer walls in the majority of Earthships are made of earth-rammed tires, but any dense material with a potential to store heat, such as concrete, adobe, earth bags, or stone, could in principle be used to create a building similar to an Earthship. The tire walls are staggered like traditional brick work, and often have "concrete half ...