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Réf.
42476
Type
article
Titre
Experimental vernacular structure, Lipica 2012
Langues
Slovenian
Auteurs
Benko, Andreja
Maison d'édition
University of Ljubljana, Faculty of Architecture
Date
2012
Pages
p. 36-39
Titre de la revue
AR Architecture, Research
Vol. & n°
v. 13 n. 2+3
ISSN
1581-6974
Mots-clés
stone / built heritage / building materials / building techniques / chalets / vernacular architecture / dissemination / education / workshops
Pays mentionnés
Slovenia
Monuments et sites
Lipica, Slovenia
Résumé en anglais
A dry-stone wall constructed from stones without mortar to bind them is a track of hands led by intellect and driven by a strong will to survive. A wall is a culture. The workshop’s task was to learn the language of the stone walls which stand as mute witnesses to people and their culture. The collecting of the stone is what matters; it entails a search for suitable stones to use at the location itself (in the case of the Lipica 2012 workshop, this was not necessary, because the stone was donated by the Portof Koper - although the stone most suitable for building had to be selected). Once the building element has been selected, we try to adjust it as much as our hands and physical power allow. With a suitable position found, we meticulously fill it with gravel. The small house walls are about 50 cm thick. In the end, the most important element of the small house is the roof. When building structures without mortar i.e. using circular overhangs of layers, called corbelling, we have to build the roof in a specific manner. The roof is simultaneously built from inside out; the chief builder is inside, as from here all the gaps and joints of the covering stones - škrlji - can be seen.
Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivatives (BY-ND)