Design With Climate Hot and Dry Climate
Design With Climate Hot and Dry Climate
Design With Climate Hot and Dry Climate
CLIMATE
Master : Dr. Hossein Medi
Student
Yasser Mottaqi
Spring 2010
Introduction
Climate
BUILT ENVIRONMENT
BUILDING FORM
Example
constarction
Conclusion
Reference
The architecture that has developed in arid zones of the middle east
have had consistent and deep-rooted building techniques which promote
passive climatic conditioning of their environments to provide shelter and
comfort from their natural environment of hot arid deserts.
Boroujerdiha House In
Kashan . This part had been
used in winter
ABASSIAN house
Using light color fao external and internal
surface
ABASSIAN house
lighting in interior space
Boroujerdiha house
Using light color for external surface
And using vegitation for reduce the heat
Boroujerdiha house
Using water for make evaporation
And court yard
Plan and section through a
Persian house showing a
unidirectional badgir
which is open to cool
breezes from the
north but rejects the hot
winds from the south. A
vacuum at the mouth of
the badgir pulls cool air
into the rooms from the
patio
Wind Mud or mud brick is the most common building material
used to make the thick walls of the hot arid zone buildings. These walls
were often 400 to 800mm in thickness. The mud mixtures often included
earth, soil, dry vegetation, and stone aggregate. Specific climatic
conditions of humidity, soil, and sun produced the need for varying
techniques of mud structure construction. In the ‘puddled’ form
technique, earth material is placed in a form with water and layered upon
itself to form a laminated wall. The addition of rocks and boulders
provides strength and reenforcement,
to the construction of the wall.
The ‘wattle and daub’ technique used a crude armature of light framework built of
sticks and wood to serve as both formwork and reinforcing, for mud to be placed
within and around the structure. The rammed earth technique is often employed to
make mud bricks in areas where water is not readily available to form ‘puddled
mud’.
Short walls or brick forms are filled with damp, and not wet, mud with earth placed
between them .The moist mixture is then compacted with a mallet or tamp until the
maximum density is achieved. In order for this technique to work, long periods of
hot, dry weather are required to allow for the rammed earth to dry and strengthen.
The building techniques of the hot arid climatic zones, developed over a long history of
construction, have progressed to promote passive climatic conditioning to protect
inhabitants from
their harsh environments. Those ideas and techniques of city planning, building form,
and
constructions methods offer great insight to the contemporary designer of Middle
Eastern desert.
[1] Arch 384: Desert Ecohouse for Yazd 1/11 Justin Huang 97285431 DESERT ECOHOUSE
University of Waterloo Terri Meyer BoakeArch 384: A Desert Ecohouse for Yazd
[4] Www.elsevier.com
[5] Www.trendir.com
[6] Www.cprenorfolk.org.uk
[7] Www.ecohome.org