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Wikipedia

Timber framing

Timber framing (German: Holzfachwerk) and "post-and-beam" construction are traditional methods of building with heavy timbers, creating structures using squared-off and carefully fitted and joined timbers with joints secured by large wooden pegs. If the structural frame of load-bearing timber is left exposed on the exterior of the building it may be referred to as half-timbered, and in many cases the infill between timbers will be used for decorative effect. The country most known for this kind of architecture is Germany, where timber-framed houses are spread all over the country.[1][2]

The market square of Dornstetten, Germany, showing an ensemble of half-timbered buildings
Rue du Gros-Horloge in Rouen, France, a city renowned for its half-timbered buildings
Lemgo, Germany, downtown

The method comes from working directly from logs and trees rather than pre-cut dimensional lumber. Hewing this with broadaxes, adzes, and draw knives and using hand-powered braces and augers (brace and bit) and other woodworking tools, artisans or framers could gradually assemble a building.

Since this building method has been used for thousands of years in many parts of the world, many styles of historic framing have developed. These styles are often categorized by the type of foundation, walls, how and where the beams intersect, the use of curved timbers, and the roof framing details.

Box frame

A simple timber frame made of straight vertical and horizontal pieces with a common rafter roof without purlins. The term box frame is not well defined and has been used for any kind of framing (with the usual exception of cruck framing). The distinction presented here is that the roof load is carried by the exterior walls. Purlins are also found even in plain timber frames.

Cruck frame

 
A "true" or "full" cruck half-timbered building in Weobley, Herefordshire, England: The cruck blades are the tall, curved timbers which extend from near the ground to the ridge.

A cruck is a pair of crooked or curved timbers[3] which form a bent (U.S.) or crossframe (UK); the individual timbers are each called a blade. More than 4,000 cruck frame buildings have been recorded in the UK. Several types of cruck frames are used; more information follows in English style below and at the main article Cruck.

  • True cruck or full cruck: blades, straight or curved, extend from ground or foundation to the ridge acting as the principal rafters. A full cruck does not need a tie beam.
  • Base cruck: tops of the blades are truncated by the first transverse member such as by a tie beam.
  • Raised cruck: blades land on masonry wall, and extend to the ridge.
  • Middle cruck: blades land on masonry wall, and are truncated by a collar.
  • Upper cruck: blades land on a tie beam, very similar to knee rafters.
  • Jointed cruck: blades are made from pieces joined near eaves in a number of ways. See also: hammerbeam roof
  • End cruck is not a style, but on the gable end of a building.

Aisled frame

 
Interior of a two-aisled market hall, Chipping Campden, Gloucestershire, England

Aisled frames have one or more rows of interior posts. These interior posts typically carry more structural load than the posts in the exterior walls. This is the same concept of the aisle in church buildings, sometimes called a hall church, where the center aisle is technically called a nave. However, a nave is often called an aisle, and three-aisled barns are common in the U.S., the Netherlands, and Germany. Aisled buildings are wider than the simpler box-framed or cruck-framed buildings, and typically have purlins supporting the rafters. In northern Germany, this construction is known as variations of a Ständerhaus.

Half-timbering

 
Half-timbered wall with three kinds of infill, wattle and daub, brick, and stone: The plaster coating which originally covered the infill and timbers is mostly gone. This building is in the central German city of Bad Langensalza.
 
Krämerbrücke in Erfurt, Germany, with half-timbered buildings dating from c. 1480

Half-timbering refers to a structure with a frame of load-bearing timber, creating spaces between the timbers called panels (in German Gefach or Fächer = partitions), which are then filled-in with some kind of nonstructural material known as infill. The frame is often left exposed on the exterior of the building.[4]

Infill materials

The earliest known type of infill, called opus craticum by the Romans, was a wattle and daub type construction.[5] Opus craticum is now confusingly applied to a Roman stone/mortar infill as well. Similar methods to wattle and daub were also used and known by various names, such as clam staff and daub, cat-and-clay, or torchis (French), to name only three.

Wattle and daub was the most common infill in ancient times. The sticks were not always technically wattlework (woven), but also individual sticks installed vertically, horizontally, or at an angle into holes or grooves in the framing. The coating of daub has many recipes, but generally was a mixture of clay and chalk with a binder such as grass or straw and water or urine.[6] When the manufacturing of bricks increased, brick infill replaced the less durable infills and became more common. Stone laid in mortar as an infill was used in areas where stone rubble and mortar were available.

Other infills include bousillage, fired brick, unfired brick such as adobe or mudbrick, stones sometimes called pierrotage, planks as in the German ständerbohlenbau, timbers as in ständerblockbau, or rarely cob without any wooden support.[7] The wall surfaces on the interior were often "ceiled" with wainscoting and plastered for warmth and appearance.

Brick infill sometimes called nogging became the standard infill after the manufacturing of bricks made them more available and less expensive. Half-timbered walls may be covered by siding materials including plaster, weatherboarding, tiles, or slate shingles.[8]

The infill may be covered by other materials, including weatherboarding or tiles.[8] or left exposed. When left exposed, both the framing and infill were sometimes done in a decorative manner. Germany is famous for its decorative half-timbering and the figures sometimes have names and meanings. The decorative manner of half-timbering is promoted in Germany by the German Timber-Frame Road, several planned routes people can drive to see notable examples of Fachwerk buildings.

Gallery of infill types:

Gallery of some named figures and decorations:

The collection of elements in half timbering are sometimes given specific names:

History of the term

According to Craven (2019),[9] the term

was used informally to mean timber-framed construction in the Middle Ages. For economy, cylindrical logs were cut in half, so one log could be used for two (or more) posts. The shaved side was traditionally on the exterior and everyone knew it to be half the timber.

The term half-timbering is not as old as the German name Fachwerk or the French name colombage, but it is the standard English name for this style. One of the first people to publish the term "half-timbered" was Mary Martha Sherwood (1775–1851), who employed it in her book, The Lady of the Manor, published in several volumes from 1823 to 1829. She uses the term picturesquely: "...passing through a gate in a quickset hedge, we arrived at the porch of an old half-timbered cottage, where an aged man and woman received us."[10] By 1842, half-timbered had found its way into The Encyclopedia of Architecture by Joseph Gwilt (1784–1863). This juxtaposition of exposed timbered beams and infilled spaces created the distinctive "half-timbered", or occasionally termed, "Tudor" style, or "black-and-white".

Oldest examples

The most ancient known half-timbered building is called the House of opus craticum. It was buried by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD in Herculaneum, Italy. Opus craticum was mentioned by Vitruvius in his books on architecture as a timber frame with wattlework infill.[11] However, the same term is used to describe timber frames with an infill of stone rubble laid in mortar the Romans called opus incertum.[12]

Alternative meanings

 
A variation of the second meaning of half-timbered: the ground floor is log and the upper floor is framed (half-timbered in the first sense). Kluge House, Montana, U.S.

A less common meaning of the term "half-timbered" is found in the fourth edition of John Henry Parker's Classic Dictionary of Architecture (1873) which distinguishes full-timbered houses from half-timbered, with half-timber houses having a ground floor in stone[13] or logs such as the Kluge House which was a log cabin with a timber-framed second floor.

Structure

 
Joints in an ancient French roof; the wooden pegs hold the mortise and tenon joinery together.
 
Projecting ("jettied") upper storeys of an English half-timbered village terraced house, the jetties plainly visible
 
This is a part of a timber frame, before pegs are inserted.

Traditional timber framing is the method of creating framed structures of heavy timber jointed together with various joints, commonly and originally with lap jointing, and then later pegged mortise and tenon joints. Diagonal bracing is used to prevent "racking", or movement of structural vertical beams or posts.[14]

Originally, German (and other) master carpenters would peg the joints with allowance of about 1 inch (25 mm), enough room for the wood to move as it 'seasoned', then cut the pegs, and drive the beam home fully into its socket.[citation needed]

To cope with variable sizes and shapes of hewn (by adze or axe) and sawn timbers, two main carpentry methods were employed: scribe carpentry and square rule carpentry.

Scribing or coping was used throughout Europe, especially from the 12th century to the 19th century, and subsequently imported to North America, where it was common into the early 19th century. In a scribe frame, timber sockets are fashioned or "tailor-made" to fit their corresponding timbers; thus, each timber piece must be numbered (or "scribed").

Square-rule carpentry was developed in New England in the 18th century. It used housed joints in main timbers to allow for interchangeable braces and girts. Today, standardized timber sizing means that timber framing can be incorporated into mass-production methods as per the joinery industry, especially where timber is cut by precision computer numerical control machinery.

Jetties

A jetty is an upper floor which sometimes historically used a structural horizontal beam, supported on cantilevers, called a bressummer or 'jetty bressummer' to bear the weight of the new wall, projecting outward from the preceding floor or storey.

In the city of York in the United Kingdom, the famous street known as The Shambles exemplifies this, where jettied houses seem to almost touch above the street.

Timbers

 
The completed frame of a modern timber-frame house
 
Ridge-post framing (left) and story framing (right, with jetties)

Historically, the timbers would have been hewn square using a felling axe and then surface-finished with a broadaxe. If required, smaller timbers were ripsawn from the hewn baulks using pitsaws or frame saws. Today, timbers are more commonly bandsawn, and the timbers may sometimes be machine-planed on all four sides.

The vertical timbers include:

The horizontal timbers include:

  • sill-beams (also called ground-sills or sole-pieces, at the bottom of a wall into which posts and studs are fitted using tenons),
  • noggin-pieces (the horizontal timbers forming the tops and bottoms of the frames of infill panels),
  • wall-plates (at the top of timber-framed walls that support the trusses and joists of the roof).

When jettying, horizontal elements can include:

  • The jetty bressummer (or breastsummer), where the main sill (horizontal piece) on which the projecting wall above rests, stretches across the whole width of the jetty wall. The bressummer is itself cantilevered forward, beyond the wall below it.
  • The dragon-beam which runs diagonally from one corner to another, and supports the corner posts above and supported by the corner posts below
  • The jetty beams or joists conform t floor dimensions above, but are at right angles to the jetty-plates that conform to the shorter dimensions of "roof" of the floor below. Jetty beams are mortised at 45° into the sides of the dragon beams. They are the main constituents of the cantilever system, and determine how far the jetty projects.
  • The jetty-plates are designed to carry the jetty beams. The jetty plates themselves are supported by the corner posts of the recessed floor below.

The sloping timbers include:

  • Trusses (the slanting timbers forming the triangular framework at gables and roof)
  • Braces (slanting beams giving extra support between horizontal or vertical members of the timber frame)
  • Herringbone bracing (a decorative and supporting style of frame, usually at 45° to the upright and horizontal directions of the frame)

Post construction and frame construction

There were two different systems of the position of posts and studs:

  • In the older manner, called post construction, the vertical elements continue from the groundwork to the roof. This post construction in German is called Geschossbauweise or Ständerbauweise. It is somewhat similar to balloon framing method common in North America until the middle of the 20th century.
  • In the advanced manner, called frame construction, each story is constructed like a case, and the whole building is constructed like a pile of such cases. This frame construction in German is called Rähmbauweise or Stockwerksbauweise.

Ridge-post framing is a structurally simple and ancient post and lintel framing where the posts extend all the way to the ridge beams. Germans call this Firstsäule or Hochstud.

Modern timber connector method (1930s–1950s)

 
Typical lapped joint assemblies of split-ring connectors

In the 1930s a system of timber framing referred to as the "modern timber connector method"[15] was developed. It was characterized by the use of timber members assembled into trusses and other framing systems and fastened using various types of metal timber connectors. This type of timber construction was used for various building types including warehouses, factories, garages, barns, stores/markets, recreational buildings, barracks, bridges, and trestles.[16] The use of these structures was promoted because of their low construction costs, easy adaptability, and performance in fire as compared to unprotected steel truss construction.

During World War II, the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the Canadian Military Engineers undertook to construct airplane hangars using this timber construction system in order to conserve steel. Wood hangars were constructed throughout North America and employed various technologies including bowstring, Warren, and Pratt trusses, glued laminated arches, and lamella roof systems. Unique to this building type is the interlocking of the timber members of the roof trusses and supporting columns and their connection points. The timber members are held apart by "fillers" (blocks of timber). This leaves air spaces between the timber members which improves air circulation and drying around the members which improves resistance to moisture born decay.

 
Shear plate timber connector

Timber members in this type of framing system were connected with ferrous timber connectors of various types. Loads between timber members were transmitted using split-rings (larger loads), toothed rings (lighter loads), or spiked grid connectors.[17] Split-ring connectors were metal rings sandwiched between adjacent timber members to connect them together. The rings were fit into circular grooves on in both timber members then the assembly was held together with through-bolts. The through-bolts only held the assembly together but were not load-carrying.[16] Shear plate connectors were used to transfer loads between timber members and metal. Shear plate connectors resembled large washers, deformed on the side facing the timber in order to grip it, and were through-fastened with long bolts or lengths of threaded rod. A leading manufacturer of these types of timber connectors was the Timber Engineering Company, or TECO, of Washington, DC. The proprietary name of their split-ring connectors was the "TECO Wedge-Fit."

Modern features

 
Porch of a modern timber-framed house
 
A modern prefabricated building made by Huf Haus, often sold as "Fachwerk", near West Linton, Scotland

In the United States and Canada, timber-frame construction has been revived since the 1970s, and is now[when?] experiencing a thriving renaissance of the ancient skills.[citation needed] This is largely due to such practitioners as Steve Chappell[who?], Jack Sobon[who?], and Tedd Benson[who?], who studied old plans and techniques and revived a long-neglected technique. Once a handcrafted skill passed down, timber-frame construction has now been modernized with the help of modern industrial tools such as CNC machines. These machines and mass-production techniques have assisted growth and made for more affordable frames and shorter lead-times for projects.[citation needed]

Timber-framed structures differ from conventional wood-framed buildings in several ways. Timber framing uses fewer, larger wooden members, commonly timbers in the range of 15 to 30 cm (6 to 12 in), while common wood framing uses many more timbers with dimensions usually in the 5- to 25-cm (2- to 10-in) range. The methods of fastening the frame members also differ. In conventional framing, the members are joined using nails or other mechanical fasteners, whereas timber framing uses the traditional mortise and tenon or more complex joints that are usually fastened using only wooden pegs.[citation needed] Modern complex structures and timber trusses often incorporate steel joinery such as gusset plates, for both structural and architectural purposes.

Recently, it has become common practice to enclose the timber structure entirely in manufactured panels such as structural insulated panels (SIPs). Although the timbers can only be seen from inside the building when so enclosed, construction is less complex and insulation is greater than in traditional timber building. SIPs are "an insulating foam core sandwiched between two structural facings, typically oriented strand board" according to the Structural Insulated Panel Association.[18] SIPs reduce dependency on bracing and auxiliary members, because the panels span considerable distances and add rigidity to the basic timber frame.

An alternate construction method is with concrete flooring with extensive use of glass. This allows a very solid construction combined with open architecture. Some firms have specialized in industrial prefabrication of such residential and light commercial structures such as Huf Haus as low-energy houses or – dependent on location – zero-energy buildings.

Straw-bale construction is another alternative where straw bales are stacked for nonload-bearing infill with various finishes applied to the interior and exterior such as stucco and plaster. This appeals to the traditionalist and the environmentalist as this is using "found" materials to build.

Mudbricks also called adobe are sometimes used to fill in timber-frame structures. They can be made on site and offer exceptional fire resistance. Such buildings must be designed to accommodate the poor thermal insulating properties of mudbrick, however, and usually have deep eaves or a veranda on four sides for weather protection.

Engineered structures

Timber design or wood design is a subcategory of structural engineering that focuses on the engineering of wood structures. Timber is classified by tree species (e.g., southern pine, douglas fir, etc.) and its strength is graded using numerous coefficients that correspond to the number of knots, the moisture content, the temperature, the grain direction, the number of holes, and other factors. There are design specifications for sawn lumber, glulam members, prefabricated I-joists, composite lumber, and various connection types. In the United States, structural frames are then designed according to the Allowable Stress Design method or the Load Reduced Factor Design method (the latter being preferred).[19]

History and traditions

 
Anne Hvides Gaard, Svendborg, Denmark, from 1560
 
Anne Hathaway's Cottage in Warwickshire, England: Its timber framing is typical of vernacular Tudor architecture

The techniques used in timber framing date back to Neolithic times, and have been used in many parts of the world during various periods such as ancient Japan, continental Europe, and Neolithic Denmark, England, France, Germany, Spain, parts of the Roman Empire, and Scotland.[20] The timber-framing technique has historically been popular in climate zones which favour deciduous hardwood trees, such as oak. Its most northernmost areas are Baltic countries and southern Sweden. Timber framing is rare in Russia, Finland, northern Sweden, and Norway, where tall and straight lumber, such as pine and spruce, is readily available and log houses were favored, instead.

Half-timbered construction in the Northern European vernacular building style is characteristic of medieval and early modern Denmark, England, Germany, and parts of France and Switzerland, where timber was in good supply yet stone and associated skills to dress the stonework were in short supply. In half-timbered construction, timbers that were riven (split) in half provided the complete skeletal framing of the building.

Europe is full of timber-framed structures dating back hundreds of years, including manors, castles, homes, and inns, whose architecture and techniques of construction have evolved over the centuries. In Asia, timber-framed structures are found, many of them temples.

Some Roman carpentry preserved in anoxic layers of clay at Romano-British villa sites demonstrate that sophisticated Roman carpentry had all the necessary techniques for this construction. The earliest surviving (French) half-timbered buildings date from the 12th century.

Important resources for the study and appreciation of historic building methods are open-air museums.

Topping out ceremony

The topping out ceremony is a builders' rite, an ancient tradition thought to have originated in Scandinavia by 700 AD.[21] In the U.S., a bough or small tree is attached to the peak of the timber frame after the frame is complete as a celebration. Historically, it was common for the master carpenter to give a speech, make a toast, and then break the glass. In Northern Europe, a wreath made for the occasion is more commonly used rather than a bough. In Japan, the "ridge raising" is a religious ceremony called the jotoshiki.[22] In Germany, it is called the Richtfest.

Carpenters' marks

Carpenters' marks are markings left on the timbers of wooden buildings during construction.

  • Assembly or marriage marks were used to identify the individual timbers. Assembly marks include numbering to identify the pieces of the frame. The numbering can be similar to Roman numerals except the number four is IIII and nine is VIIII. These marks are chiseled, cut with a race knife (a tool to cut lines and circles in wood), or saw cuts. The numbering can also be in Arabic numerals which are often written with a red grease pencil or crayon. German and French carpenters made some unique marks. (Abbundzeichen (German assembly marks)).
  • Layout marks left over from marking out identify the place where to cut joints and bore peg holes; carpenters also marked the location on a timber where they had levelled it, as part of the building process, and called these "level lines"; sometimes they made a mark two feet from a critical location, which was then called the "two-foot mark". These marks are typically scratched on the timber with an awl-like tool until later in the 19th century, when they started using pencils.
  • Occasionally, carpenters or owners marked a date and/or their initials in the wood, but not like masons left masons' marks.
  • Boards on the building may have "tally marks" cut into them which were numbers used to keep track of quantities of lumber (timber).
  • Other markings in old buildings are called "ritual marks", which were often signs the occupants felt would protect them from harm.

Tools

 
German carpenters in 1880: The tools, from left to right, are: a cart loaded with timbers, rough hewing with felling axes; in the green coat is the master carpenter carrying his tools including a frame saw; on the ground, a ring dog (precursor to the cant dog and peavey); in the background sawyers pit sawing on trestles; on right carpenters striking a mortising chisel with a mallet and boring a hole with a T-auger; lower right on ground a two-man crosscut saw, steel square, broadaxe, and (hard to see) a froe.

Many historic hand tools used by timber framers for thousands of years have similarities, but vary in shape. Electrically powered tools first became available in the 1920s in the U.S. and continue to evolve. See the list of timber framing tools for basic descriptions and images of unusual tools (The list is incomplete at this time).

British tradition

 
The timber-framed Staple Inn in Holborn, London

Some of the earliest known timber houses in Europe have been found in Great Britain, dating to Neolithic times; Balbridie and Fengate are some of the rare examples of these constructions.

Molded plaster ornamentation, pargetting[23] further enriched some English Tudor architecture houses. Half-timbering is characteristic of English vernacular architecture in East Anglia,[24] Warwickshire,[25][26] Worcestershire,[27] Herefordshire,[28][29] Shropshire,[30][31] and Cheshire,[32] where one of the most elaborate surviving English examples of half-timbered construction is Little Moreton Hall.[33]

In South Yorkshire, the oldest timber house in Sheffield, the "Bishops' House" (c. 1500), shows traditional half-timbered construction.

In the Weald of Kent and Sussex,[34] the half-timbered structure of the Wealden hall house,[35] consisted of an open hall with bays on either side and often jettied upper floors.

Half-timbered construction traveled with British colonists to North America in the early 17th century but was soon abandoned in New England and the mid-Atlantic colonies for clapboard facings (an East Anglia tradition). The original English colonial settlements, such as Plymouth, Massachusetts and Jamestown, Virginia had timber-framed buildings, rather than the log cabins often associated with the American frontier. Living history programs demonstrating the building technique are available at both these locations.

One of the surviving streets lined with almost-touching houses is known as The Shambles, York, and is a very popular tourist attraction.

English styles

For Timber-framed houses in Wales see: Architecture of Wales

Historic timber-frame construction in England (and the rest of the United Kingdom) showed regional variation[36] which has been divided into the "eastern school", the "western school", and the "northern school", although the characteristic types of framing in these schools can be found in the other regions (except the northern school).[37] A characteristic of the eastern school is close studding which is a half-timbering style of many studs spaced about the width of the studs apart (for example six-inch studs spaced six inches apart) until the middle of the 16th century and sometimes wider spacing after that time. Close studding was an elite style found mostly on expensive buildings. A principal style of the western school is the use of square panels of roughly equal size and decorative framing utilizing many shapes such as lozenges, stars, crosses, quatrefoils, cusps, and many other shapes.[37] The northern school sometimes used posts which landed on the foundation rather than on a sill beam, the sill joining to the sides of the posts and called an interrupted sill. Another northern style was to use close studding but in a herring-bone or chevron pattern.[37]

 
Roof structure of the Barley Barn, Cressing Temple, Essex

As houses were modified to cope with changing demands there sometimes were a combination of styles within a single timber-frame construction.[38] The major types of historic framing in England are 'cruck frame',[38] box frame,[38] and aisled construction. From the box frame, more complex framed buildings such as the Wealden House and Jettied house developed[citation needed].

The cruck frame design is among the earliest, and was[38] in use by the early 13th century, with its use continuing to the present day, although rarely after the 18th century.[38] Since the 18th century however, many existing cruck structures have been modified, with the original cruck framework becoming hidden.[citation needed] Aisled barns are of two or three aisled types, the oldest surviving aisled barn being the barley barn at Cressing Temple[37] dated to 1205–35.[39]

Jettying was introduced in the 13th century and continued to be used through the 16th century.[37]

Generally speaking, the size of timbers used in construction, and the quality of the workmanship reflect the wealth and status of their owners. Small cottages often used quite small cross-section timbers which would have been deemed unsuitable by others. Some of these small cottages also have a very 'home-made' – even temporary – appearance. Many such example can be found in the English shires. Equally, some relatively small buildings can be seen to incorporate substantial timbers and excellent craftsmanship, reflecting the relative wealth and status of their original owners. Important resources for the study of historic building methods in the UK are open-air museums.

It is often claimed that timber-framed buildings in Britain contain reused ships' timbers. This belief is dismissed by experts, who point out that curved timbers are rarely suitable, that salt is destructive to cellulose in the wood, and that ships' timbers are generally slight compared to cruck trusses.[40]

French tradition

 
Coupesarte Manor (Normandy, France)

Elaborately half-timbered houses of the 13th through 18th centuries still remain in Bourges, Tours, Troyes, Rouen, Thiers, Dinan, Rennes, and many other cities, except in Provence and Corsica. Timber framing in French is known colloquially as pan de bois and half-timbering as colombage. Alsace is the region with the most timbered houses in France.

The Normandy tradition features two techniques: frameworks were built of four evenly spaced regularly hewn timbers set into the ground (poteau en terre) or into a continuous wooden sill (poteau de sole) and mortised at the top into the plate. The openings were filled with many materials including mud and straw, wattle and daub, or horsehair and gypsum.[41]

German tradition (Fachwerkhäuser)

Germany has several styles of timber framing, but probably the greatest number of half-timbered buildings in the world are to be found in Germany and in Alsace (France). There are many small towns which escaped both war damage and modernisation and consist mainly, or even entirely, of half-timbered houses.

 
The Spitzhäuschen, a very narrow, timber-frame house in Bernkastel at the river Moselle, built in 1417.

The German Timber-Frame Road (Deutsche Fachwerkstraße) is a tourist route that connects towns with remarkable fachwerk. It is more than 2,000 km (1,200 mi) long, crossing Germany through the states of Lower Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, Hesse, Thuringia, Bavaria, and Baden-Württemberg.[14][42]

Some of the more prominent towns (among many) include: Quedlinburg, a UNESCO-listed town, which has over 1200 half-timbered houses spanning five centuries; Goslar, another UNESCO-listed town; Hanau-Steinheim (home of the Brothers Grimm); Bad Urach; Eppingen ("Romance city" with a half-timbered church dating from 1320); Mosbach; Vaihingen an der Enz and nearby UNESCO-listed Maulbronn Abbey; Schorndorf (birthplace of Gottlieb Daimler); Calw; Celle; and Biberach an der Riß with both the largest medieval complex, the Holy Spirit Hospital and one of Southern Germany's oldest buildings, now the Braith-Mali-Museum, dated to 1318.

German fachwerk building styles are extremely varied with a huge number of carpentry techniques which are highly regionalized. German planning laws for the preservation of buildings and regional architecture preservation dictate that a half-timbered house must be authentic to regional or even city-specific designs before being accepted.[43][44]

A brief overview of styles follows, as a full inclusion of all styles is impossible.

In general the northern states have fachwerk very similar to that of the nearby Netherlands and England while the more southerly states (most notably Bavaria and Switzerland) have more decoration using timber because of greater forest reserves in those areas. During the 19th century, a form of decorative timber-framing called bundwerk became popular in Bavaria, Austria and South Tyrol.

The German fachwerkhaus usually has a foundation of stone, or sometimes brick, perhaps up to several feet (a couple of metres) high, which the timber framework is mortised into or, more rarely, supports an irregular wooden sill.

The three main forms may be divided geographically:

  • West Central Germany and Franconia:
    • In West Central German and Franconian timber-work houses (particularly in the Central Rhine and Moselle): the windows most commonly lie between the rails of the sills and lintels.
  • Northern Germany, Central Germany and East German:
    • In Saxony and around the Harz foothills, angle braces often form fully extended triangles.
    • Lower Saxon houses have a joist for every post.
    • Holstein fachwerk houses are famed for their massive 12-inch (30 cm) beams.
  • Southern Germany including the Black and Bohemian Forests
    • In Swabia, Württemberg, Alsace, and Switzerland, the use of the lap-joint is thought to be the earliest method of connecting the wall plates and tie beams and is particularly identified with Swabia. A later innovation (also pioneered in Swabia) was the use of tenons – builders left timbers to season which were held in place by wooden pegs (i.e., tenons). The timbers were initially placed with the tenons left an inch or two out of intended position and later driven home after becoming fully seasoned.

The most characteristic feature is the spacing between the posts and the high placement of windows. Panels are enclosed by a sill, posts, and a plate, and are crossed by two rails between which the windows are placed—like "two eyes peering out".[43][44]

In addition there is a myriad of regional scrollwork and fretwork designs of the non-loadbearing large timbers (braces) peculiar to particularly wealthy towns or cities.

A unique type of timber-frame house can be found in the region where the borders of Germany, the Czech Republic, and Poland meet – it is called the Upper Lusatian house (Umgebindehaus, translates as round-framed house). This type has a timber frame surrounding a log structure on part of the ground floor.[citation needed]

Italy

Several half-timbered houses can be found in Northern Italy, especially in Piedmont, Lombardy, in the city of Bologna, in Sardinia in the Barbagia region and in the Iglesiente mining region.

Poland

 
Timber-frame house in central Poznań, Poland
 
The Churches of Peace in southwestern Poland are the largest religious timberframed structures in Europe

Historically, the majority of Polish cities as well as their central marketplaces possessed timber-framed dwellings and housing.[45] Throughout the Middle Ages it was customary in Poland to use either bare brick or wattle and daub (Polish: szachulec) as filling in-between the timber frame.[45] However, the half-timbered houses which can be observed nowadays have been built in regions that were historically German or had significant German cultural influence. As these regions were at some point parts of German Prussia, half-timbered walls are often called mur pruski (lit. Prussian wall) in Polish. A distinctive type of house associated with mostly Mennonite immigrant groups from Frisia and the Netherlands, known as the Olędrzy, is called an "arcade house" (dom podcieniowy). The biggest timber-framed religious buildings in Europe are the Churches of Peace in southwestern Poland.[46] There are also numerous examples of timber-framed secular structures such as the granaries in Bydgoszcz.

The Umgebindehaus rural housing tradition of south Saxony (Germany) is also found in the neighboring areas of Poland, particularly in the Silesian region.

Another world-class type of wooden building Poland shares with some neighboring countries are its wooden church buildings.

Spain

The Spanish generally follow the Mediterranean forms of architecture with stone walls and shallow roof pitch. Timber framing is often of the post and lintel style. Castile and León, par example La Alberca, and the Basque Country have the most representative examples of the use of timber framing in the Iberian Peninsula.

Most traditional Basque buildings with half-timbering elements are detached farm houses (in Basque: baserriak). Their upper floors were built with jettied box frames in close studding. In the oldest farmsteads and, if existing, in the third floor the walls were sometimes covered with vertical weatherboards. Big holes were left in the gable of the main façade for ventilation. The wooden beams were painted over, mostly in dark red. The vacancies were filled in with wattle and daub or rubble laid in a clay mortar and then plastered over with white chalk or nogged with bricks. Although the entire supporting structure is made of wood, the timbering is only visible on the main façade, which is generally oriented to the southeast.

Although the typical Basque house is now mostly associated with half-timbering, the outer walls and the fire-walls were built in masonry (rubble stone, bricks or, ideally, ashlars) whenever it could be afforded. Timber was a sign of poverty. Oak-wood was cheaper than masonry: that is why, when the money was running out, the upper floor walls were mostly built timbered. Extant baserriak with half-timbered upper-floor façades were built from the 15th to 19th centuries and are found in all Basque regions with oceanic climate, except in Zuberoa (Soule), but are concentrated in Lapurdi (Labourd).

Some medieval Basque tower houses (Dorretxe [eu]) feature an overhanged upper floor in half-timbering.

To a lesser extent timbered houses are also found in villages and towns as row houses, as the photo from the Uztaritz village shows.

Currently, it has again become popular to build Néobasque [fr] houses resembling old Basque farmsteads, with more or less respect for the principles of traditional half-timbered building.

Switzerland

 
An exceptional fachwerk house called Eglihaus in Hombrechtikon, Switzerland

Switzerland has many styles of timber framing which overlap with its neighboring countries.

Belgium

Nowadays, timber framing is primarily found in the provinces of Limburg, Liège, and Luxembourg. In urban areas, the ground floor was formerly built in stone and the upper floors in timber framing. Also, as timber framing was seen as a cheaper way of building, often the visible structures of noble houses were in stone and bricks, and the invisible or lateral walls in timber framing. The open-air museums of Bokrijk and Saint-Hubert (Fourneau Saint-Michel) show many examples of Belgian timber framing. Many post-and-beam houses can be found in cities and villages, but, unlike France, the United Kingdom, and Germany, there are few fully timber framed cityscapes.

Denmark

Timber frame (bindingsværk, literally "binding work") is the traditional building style in almost all of Denmark, making it the only Nordic country where this style is prevalent in all regions. Along the west coast of Jutland, houses built entirely of bricks were traditionally more common due to lack of suitable wood. In the 19th and especially in the 20th century, bricks have been the preferred building material in all of Denmark, but traditional timber-frame houses remain common both in the towns and in the countryside. Different regions have different traditions as to whether the timber frame should be tarred and thus clearly visible or be limewashed or painted in the same colour as the infills.

Sweden

The Swedish mostly built log houses but they do have traditions of several types of timber framing: Some of the following links are written in Swedish. Most of the half-timbered houses in Sweden were built during the Danish time and are located in what until 1658 used to be Danish territory in southern Sweden, primarily in the province Skåne and secondarily in Blekinge and Halland. In Swedish half-timber is known as "korsvirke".

  • Stave construction is called "stavverk". Scandinavia is famous for its ancient stave churches. Stave construction is a traditional timber frame with walls of vertical planks, the posts and planks landing in a sill on a foundation. Similar construction with earthfast posts is called "stolpteknik". and Palisade construction where many vertical wall timbers or planks have their feet buried in the ground called post in ground or earthfast construction is called "palissadteknik". (see also Palisade church)
  • Swedish plank-frame construction is called skiftesverk. This is a traditional timber frame with walls of horizontal planks.

Norway

Norway has at least two significant types of timber-framed structures: the stave church and Grindverk [no]. The term stave (a post or pole) indicates that a stave church essentially means a framed church, a distinction made in a region where log building is common. All but one surviving stave churches are in Norway, one in Sweden. Replicas of stave churches and other Norwegian building types have been reproduced elsewhere, e.g. at the Scandinavian Heritage Park in North Dakota, United States.

Grindverk translates as trestle construction, consisting of a series of transversal frames of two posts and a connecting beam, supporting two parallel wall plates bearing the rafters. Unlike other types of timber framing in Europe, the trestle frame construction uses no mortise and tenon joints. Archaeological excavations have uncovered similar wooden joints from more than 3,000 years ago, suggesting that this type of framing is an ancient unbroken tradition. Grindverk buildings are only found on part of the western coast of Norway, and most of them are boathouses and barns.

Log building was the common construction used for housing humans and livestock in Norway from the middle ages until the 18th century. Timber framing of the type used in large parts of Europe appeared occasionally in late medieval towns, but never became common, except for the capital Christiania. After a fire in 1624 in Oslo, King Christian IV ordered the town to be relocated to a new site. He outlawed log building to prevent future conflagrations and required wealthy burghers to use brickwork and the less affluent to use timber framing in the Danish manner. During the next two centuries, 50 per cent of the houses were timber framed.

All of these buildings disappeared as a consequence of this small provincial town of Christiania becoming the capital of independent Norway in 1814. This caused a rapid growth, with the population rising from 10 000 to 250 000 by 1900. Increasing prices caused a massive urban renewal, which resulted in all wooden structures being replaced with office blocks.

Netherlands

 
A half timbered building without the infill in Limburg, Netherlands.

The Netherlands is often overlooked for its timbered houses, yet many exist, including windmills. It was in North Holland where the import of cheaper timber, combined with the Dutch innovation of windmill-powered sawmills, allowed economically viable widespread use of protective wood covering over framework. In the late 17th century the Dutch introduced vertical cladding also known in Eastern England as clasp board and in western England as weatherboard, then as more wood was available more cheaply, horizontal cladding in the 17th century. Perhaps owing to economic considerations, vertical cladding returned to fashion.[47] Dutch wall framing is virtually always built in bents and the three basic types of roof framing are the rafter roof, purlin roof, and ridge-post roof.[48]

Romania

Half-timbered houses can be found in Romania mostly in areas once inhabited by Transylvanian Saxons, in cities, towns and villages with Germanic influence such as Bistrița, Brașov, Mediaș, Sibiu and Sighișoara. However the number of half-timbered houses is very small. In Wallachia there are few examples of this type of architecture, most of those buildings being located in Sinaia, such as the Peleș Castle.

Baltic states

As the result of centuries of German settlement and cultural influence, towns in the Baltic states such as Klaipėda and Riga also preserve German-style Fachwerkhäuser.

Americas

Most "haft-timbered" houses existing in Missouri, Pennsylvania, and Texas were built by German settlers.[41] Old Salem North Carolina has fine examples of German fachwerk buildings.[49] Many are still present in Colonia Tovar (Venezuela), Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil), where Germans settled. Later, they chose more suitable building materials for local conditions (most likely because of the great problem of tropical termites.)

New France

In the historical region of North America known as New France, colombage pierroté, also called maçonnerie entre poteaux,[50] half-timbered construction with the infill between the posts and studs of stone rubble and lime plaster or bousillage[50] and simply called colombage in France. Colombage was used from the earliest settlement until the 18th century but was known as bousillage entre poteaus sur solle in Lower Louisiana. The style had its origins in Normandy, and was brought to Canada by very early Norman settlers. The Men's House at Lower Fort Garry is a good example. The exterior walls of such buildings were often covered over with clapboards to protect the infill from erosion. Naturally, this required frequent maintenance, and the style was abandoned as a building method in the 18th century in Québec. For the same reasons, half-timbering in New England, which was originally employed by the English settlers, fell out of favour soon after the colonies had become established.

Other variations of half-timbering are colombage à teurques (torchis), straw coated with mud and hung over horizontal staves (or otherwise held in place), colombage an eclisses, and colombage a lattes.[50]

Poteaux-en-terre (posts in ground) is a type of timber framing with the many vertical posts or studs buried in the ground called post in ground or "earthfast" construction. The tops of the posts are joined to a beam and the spaces between are filled in with natural materials called bousillage or pierrotage.

Poteaux-sur-sol (posts on a sill) is a general term for any kind of framing on a sill. However, sometimes it specifically refers to "vertical log construction" like poteaux-en-terre placed on sills with the spaces between the timbers infilled.

Piece-sur-piece also known as Post-and-plank style or "corner post construction" (and many other names) in which wood is used both for the frame and horizontal infill; for this reason it may be incorrect to call it "half-timbering". It is sometimes a blend of framing and log building with two styles: the horizontal pieces fit into groves in the posts and can slide up and down or the horizontal pieces fit into individual mortises in the posts and are pegged and the gaps between the pieces chinked (filled in with stones or chips of wood covered with mud or moss briefly discussed in Log cabin.)

This technique of a timber frame walls filled in with horizontal planks or logs proved better suited to the harsh climates of Québec and Acadia, which at the same time had abundant wood. It became very popular throughout New France, as far afield as southern Louisiana. The Hudson's Bay Company used this technique for many of its trading posts, and this style of framing becoming known as Hudson Bay style or Hudson Bay corners. Also used by the Red River Colony this style also became known as "Red River Framing". "The support of horizontal timbers by corner posts is an old form of construction in Europe. It was apparently carried across much of the continent from Silesia by the Lausitz urnfield culture in the late Bronze Age."[51] Similar building techniques are apparently not found in France[52] but exist in Germany and Switzerland known as Bohlenstanderbau when planks are used or blockstanderbau when beams are used as the infill. In Sweden known as sleppvegg or skiftesverk and in Denmark as bulhus.

A particularly interesting example in the U.S. is the Golden Plough Tavern (c. 1741), York, York County, PA, which has the ground level of corner-post construction with the second floor of fachwerk (half timbered) and was built for a German with other Germanic features.[53]

Settlers in New France also built horizontal log, brick, and stone buildings.

New Netherland

Characteristics of traditional timber framing in the parts of the U.S. formerly known as New Netherland are H-framing also known as dropped-tie framing in the U.S. and the similar anchor beam framing as found in the New World Dutch barn.

New England

Some time periods/regions within New England contain certain framing elements such as common purlin roofs, five sided ridge beams, plank-frame construction and plank-wall construction. The English barn always contains an "English tying joint" and the later New England style barn were built using bents.

Japanese

 
Wall framing of a Japanese house under construction

Japanese timber framing is believed to be descended from Chinese framing (see Ancient Chinese wooden architecture). Asian framing is significantly different from western framing, with its predominant use of post and lintel framing and an almost complete lack of diagonal bracing.

Revival styles in later centuries

 
The Saitta House, Dyker Heights, Brooklyn, New York, built in 1899 has half-timber decoration.[54]

When half-timbering regained popularity in Britain after 1860 in the various revival styles, such as the Queen Anne style houses by Richard Norman Shaw and others, it was often used to evoke a "Tudor" atmosphere (see Tudorbethan), though in Tudor times half-timbering had begun to look rustic and was increasingly limited to village houses (illustration, above left).

In 1912, Allen W. Jackson published The Half-Timber House: Its Origin, Design, Modern Plan, and Construction, and rambling half-timbered beach houses appeared on dune-front properties in Rhode Island or under palm-lined drives of Beverly Hills. During the 1920s increasingly minimal gestures towards some half-timbering in commercial speculative housebuilding saw the fashion diminish.

In the revival styles, such as Tudorbethan (Mock Tudor), the half-timbered appearance is superimposed on the brickwork or other material as an outside decorative façade rather than forming the main frame that supports the structure.

The style was used in many of the homes built in Lake Mohawk, New Jersey, as well as all of the clubhouse, shops, and marina.

For information about "roundwood framing" see the book Roundwood Timber Framing:Building Naturally Using Local Resources by Ben Law (East Meon, Hampshire: Permanent Publications; 2010. ISBN 1856230414)

Advantages

The use of timber framing in buildings offers various aesthetic and structural benefits, as the timber frame lends itself to open plan designs and allows for complete enclosure in effective insulation for energy efficiency. In modern construction, a timber-frame structure offers many benefits:

  • It is rapidly erected. A moderately sized timber-frame home can be erected within 2 to 3 days.
  • It is well suited to prefabrication, modular construction, and mass-production. Timbers can be pre-fit within bents or wall-sections and aligned with a jig in a shop, without the need for a machine or hand-cut production line. This allows faster erection on site and more precise alignments. Valley and hip timbers are not typically pre-fitted.
  • As an alternative to the traditional infill methods, the frame can be encased with SIPs. This stage of preparing the assembled frame for the installation of windows, mechanical systems, and roofing is known as drying in.
  • it can be customized with carvings or incorporate heirloom structures such as barns etc..
  • it can use recycled or otherwise discarded timbers
  • it offers some structural benefits as the timber frame, if properly engineered, lends itself to better seismic survivability[55] Consequently, there are many half-timbered houses which still stand despite the foundation having partially caved in over the centuries.
  • The generally larger spaces between the frames enable greater flexibility in the placement, at construction or afterwards, of windows and doors with less resulting weakening of the structural integrity and the need for heavy lintels.

In North America, heavy timber construction is classified Building Code Type IV: a special class reserved for timber framing which recognizes the inherent fire resistance of large timber and its ability to retain structural capacity in fire situations. In many cases this classification can eliminate the need and expense of fire sprinklers in public buildings.[56]

Disadvantages

Traditional or historic structures

In terms of the traditional half-timber or fachwerkhaus there are maybe more disadvantages than advantages today. Such houses are notoriously expensive to maintain let alone renovate and restore, most commonly owing to local regulations that do not allow divergence from the original, modification or incorporation of modern materials. Additionally, in such nations as Germany, where energy efficiency is highly regulated, the renovated building may be required to meet modern energy efficiencies, if it is to be used as a residential or commercial structure (museums and significant historic buildings have no semi-permanent habitade exempt). Many framework houses of significance are treated merely to preserve, rather than render inhabitable – most especially as the required heavy insecticidal fumigation is highly poisonous.

In some cases, it is more economical to build anew using authentic techniques and correct period materials than restore. One major problem with older structures is the phenomenon known as mechano-sorptive creep or slanting: where wood beams absorb moisture whilst under compression or tension strains and deform, shift position or both. This is a major structural issue as the house may deviate several degrees from perpendicular to its foundations (in the x-axis, y-axis, and even z-axis) and thus be unsafe and unstable or so out of square it is extremely costly to remedy.[57]

A summary of problems with Fachwerkhäuser or half-timbered houses includes the following, though many can be avoided by thoughtful design and application of suitable paints and surface treatments and routine maintenance. Often, though when dealing with a structure of a century or more old, it is too late.[47]

  • "slanting"- thermo-mechanical (weather-seasonally induced) and mechano-sorptive (moisture induced) creep of wood in tension and compression.[57]
  • poor prevention of capillary movement of water within any exposed timber, leading to afore-described creep, or rot
  • eaves that are too narrow or non-existent (thus allowing total exposure to rain and snow)
  • too much exterior detailing that does not allow adequate rainwater run-off
  • timber ends, joints, and corners poorly protected through coatings, shape or position
  • non-beveled vertical beams (posts and clapboards) allow water absorption and retention through capillary action.
  • surface point or coatings allowed to deteriorate
  • traditional gypsum, or wattle and daub containing organic materials (animal hair, straw, manure) which then decompose.
  • in both poteaux-en-terre and poteaux-sur-sol, insect, fungus or bacterial decomposition.
  • rot including dry rot.
  • infestation of xylophagous pest organisms such as (very common in Europe) the Ptinidae family, particularly the common furniture beetle, termites, cockroaches, powderpost beetles, mice, and rats (quite famously so in many children's stories).
  • Noise from footsteps in adjacent rooms above, below, and on the same floor in such buildings can be quite audible. This is often resolved with built-up floor systems involving clever sound-isolation and absorption techniques and at the same time providing passage space for plumbing, wiring, and even heating and cooling equipment.
  • Other fungi that are non-destructive to the wood but are harmful to humans, such as black mold. These fungi may also thrive on many "modern" building materials.
  • Wood burns more readily than some other materials, making timber-frame buildings somewhat more susceptible to fire damage, although this idea is not universally accepted: Since the cross-sectional dimensions of many structural members exceed 15 cm × 15 cm (6" × 6"), timber-frame structures benefit from the unique properties of large timbers, which char on the outside, forming an insulated layer that protects the rest of the beam from burning.[58][59]
  • prior flood or soil subsidence damage

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Deutsche Welle. "Немецкий фахверк | DW | 14 July 2021". DW.COM (in Russian). Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  2. ^ "Timber framing – A rediscovered technique for building a home". Walls with Stories. 17 June 2017. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  3. ^ Oxford English Dictionary
  4. ^ Nikolas Davies, Erkki Jokiniemi: 2008. Dictionary of architecture and building construction. Architectural Press. ISBN 978-0-7506-8502-3. 726 pages: pp 181
  5. ^ Vitruvious On Architecture (translated in 1931 from the eighth century Latin), Book II, Chapter 8, paragraph 20
  6. ^ Sunshine, Paula. Wattle and daub. Princes Risborough: Shire Publications, 2006. 7–8. Print. ISBN 0747806527
  7. ^ Glick, Thomas F., Steven John Livesey, and Faith Wallis. Medieval science, technology, and medicine: an encyclopedia. New York: Routledge, 2005. 229. Print. ISBN 0415969301
  8. ^ a b Pollard, Richard; Nikolaus Pevsner (2006). The Buildings of England: Lancashire: Liverpool and the South-West. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 710–711. ISBN 0-300-10910-5.
  9. ^ Craven, Jackie (3 July 2019). "The Look of Medieval Half-Timbered Construction". Retrieved 20 April 2022.
  10. ^ Sherwood, Mary Martha (1827). The lady of the manor being a series of conversations on the subject of confirmation. Intended for the use of the middle and higher ranks of young females. Vol. 5. Wellington, Salop. London: F. Houlston and Son. p. 168. Retrieved 20 April 2022.
  11. ^ "LacusCurtius • Vitruvius de Architectura – Liber Secundus". penelope.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  12. ^ Wilson, Nigel Guy. Encyclopedia of ancient Greece. London: Routledge, 2006. 82. Print. ISBN 0415973341
  13. ^ Joyn Henry Parker, 1875. Classic Dictionary of Architecture, 4th ed. Facsimile published in 1986 by New Orchard Editions, Poole, Dorset, pp. 178–179
  14. ^ a b Nortrud G. Schrammel-Schäl, Karl Kessler, Paul-Georg Custodis, Kreisverwaltung des Westerwaldkreises in Montabaur. Fachwerk im Westerwald: Landschaftsmuseum Westerwald, Hachenburg, Ausstellung vom 11. September 1987 bis 30 April 1988. Landschaftsmuseum Westerwald: 1987. ISBN 978-3-921548-37-0. 78 pages
  15. ^ National Lumber Manufacturer's Association. "Airplane hangar Construction". Construction Information Series: Lumber and It's Utilization, vol. IV, ch. 8, 1941.
  16. ^ a b TECO Timber Engineering Company. "Specify Timber with the TECO System for Industrial and Commercial Structures". 1950.
  17. ^ Raser, Wm. V. (1941). Modern Timber Connectors for Modern Timber Structures (Unpublished master's thesis). Corvallis, OR.: School of Forestry, Oregon State College. Retrieved 20 April 2022 – via Scholars Archive at OSU.
  18. ^ "What Are SIPs?". from the original on 10 February 2013. Retrieved 1 February 2013.
  19. ^ "National Design Specification for Wood Construction". American Wood Council. 2018. Retrieved 13 December 2018.
  20. ^ Williams, J. H. (1971). "Roman Building-Materials in South-East England". Britannia. Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies. 2: 166–195. doi:10.2307/525807. JSTOR 525807. S2CID 162393242. Retrieved 20 April 2022.
  21. ^ Robert J. Abrams in Why Do Clocks Run Clockwise? And Other Imponderables.
  22. ^ Aquarium, Tennessee. "- Tennessee Aquarium". tnaqua.org. from the original on 11 August 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  23. ^ "Pargetting on the White Horse, Pleshey (C) Colin Smith". geograph.org.uk. from the original on 5 August 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  24. ^ "Half-timbered house in Laxfield (C) Toby Speight". geograph.org.uk. from the original on 5 August 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  25. ^ "Shakespeare's Birthplace in Stratford... (C) Frederick Blake". geograph.org.uk. from the original on 1 May 2018. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  26. ^ "The Shakespeare Hotel- Stratford Upon Avon:: OS grid SP2054: Geograph Britain and Ireland – photograph every grid square!". Geograph.org.uk. from the original on 7 July 2012. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  27. ^ "Huddington Court (C) Richard Dunn". geograph.org.uk. from the original on 5 August 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  28. ^ "West End Farm, Pembridge, Herefordshire (C) Doug Elliot". geograph.org.uk. from the original on 5 August 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  29. ^ "Pembridge, Market Hall and New Inn:: OS grid SO3958: Geograph Britain and Ireland – photograph every grid square!". Geograph.org.uk. 10 April 2006. from the original on 8 July 2012. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  30. ^ "The Feathers Hotel, Ludlow (C) Humphrey Bolton". geograph.org.uk. from the original on 5 August 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  31. ^ "Historic buildings in Ludlow:: OS grid SO5174: Geograph Britain and Ireland – photograph every grid square!". Geograph.org.uk. 24 February 2007. from the original on 8 July 2012. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  32. ^ "Half timbered building (C) Andy and Hilary". geograph.org.uk. from the original on 5 August 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  33. ^ "Little Moreton Hall: Cheshire (C) Pam Brophy". geograph.org.uk. from the original on 5 August 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  34. ^ "Spreadeagle Hotel 1430: Midhurst (C) Pam Brophy". geograph.org.uk. from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  35. ^ "Wealden house". Geograph.org.uk. from the original on 15 July 2012. Retrieved 29 April 2012.
  36. ^ Cruck Construction: an introduction and catalogue (CBA Research Report 42), pp. 61–92.
  37. ^ a b c d e Brown, R. J.. Timber-framed buildings of England. London: R. Hale Ltd. 1997.46–48. ISBN 0709060920
  38. ^ a b c d e Vince, J.; The Timbered House; Sorbus, 1994; ISBN 1-874329-75-3
  39. ^ Bettley, James, and Nikolaus Pevsner. Essex: The Buildings of England. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2007. 313. ISBN 0300116144
  40. ^ McKenna, Laurie (1994). Timber Framed Buildings in Cheshire. Cheshire County Council. p. 69. ISBN 0906765161.
  41. ^ a b Charles Van Ravenswaay: 2006. The arts and architecture of German settlements in Missouri: a survey of a vanishing culture University of Missouri Press: 2006. ISBN 978-0-8262-1700-4. 539 pages
  42. ^ Heinrich Edel: 1928. Die Fachwerkhäuser der Stadt Braunschweig: ein kunst und kulturhistorisches Bild. Druckerei Appelhaus, 1928
  43. ^ a b Wilhelm Süvern: 1971. Torbögen und Inschriften lippischer Fachwerkhäuser in Volume 7 of Heimatland Lippe. Lippe Heimatbund: 1971. 48 pages
  44. ^ a b Heinrich Stiewe: 2007. Fachwerkhäuser in Deutschland: Konstruktion, Gestalt und Nutzung vom Mittelalter bis heute. Primus Verlag: 2007. ISBN 978-3-89678-589-3. 160 pages
  45. ^ a b www.eura7.com, Agencja interaktywna EURA7-. "Domy z szachulca, czyli co łączy Sudety i Pomorze Gdańskie?". www.foveotech.pl.
  46. ^ "Pałac Jugowice".
  47. ^ a b Lars Boström editor 1st International RILEM Symposium on Timber Engineering: Stockholm, Sweden, 13–14 September 1999 Volume 8 of RILEM proceedings RILEM Publications, 1999. ISBN 978-2-912143-10-5. 838 pages. 317–327.
  48. ^ Herman Janse, Houten kappen in Nederland 1000–1940. Delftse Universitaire Pers, Delft / Rijksdienst voor de Monumentenzorg, Zeist 1989. translations are mine
  49. ^ Noble, Allen George, and M. Margaret Geib. Wood, brick, and stone: the North American settlement landscape. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1984. 42, 43.
  50. ^ a b c "colombage pierroté" def. 1. Edwards, Jay Dearborn, and Nicolas Verton. A Creole lexicon architecture, landscape, people. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2004. 65. Print.
  51. ^ Upton, Dell, Vllach, John Michael, Common places: Readings in American Vernacular Architecture, referencing V. Gordon Childe, The Bronze Age, (NY, Macmillan, 1930, pp. 206–8.
  52. ^ Noble, Allen George, and M. Margaret Geib. Wood, brick, and stone: the North American settlement landscape. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 1984. 121.
  53. ^ "Corner-Post Log Construction: Description, Analysis, and Sources", A Report to Early American Industries Association by Nancy S. Shedd 10 March 1986. available online at . Archived from the original on 25 September 2013. Retrieved 10 April 2014.).
  54. ^ "Saitta House – Report Part 1 2008-12-16 at the Wayback Machine",DykerHeightsCivicAssociation.com
  55. ^ Gotz, Karl-Heinz; et al. (1989). Timber Design & Construction Sourcebook. McGraw-Hall. ISBN 0-07-023851-0.
  56. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 15 July 2009.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  57. ^ a b Charlotte Bengtsson: "Mechano-sorptive creep of wood in tension and compression": in Lars Boström editor 1st International RILEM Symposium on Timber Engineering: Stockholm, Sweden, 13–14 September 1999 Volume 8 of RILEM proceedings, RILEM Publications, 1999. ISBN 978-2-912143-10-5. 838 pages. 317–327.
  58. ^ (PDF). Canadian Wood Council. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 May 2008.
  59. ^ Bailey, Colin. "Timber". Structural Material Behavior in Fire. University of Manchester. from the original on 9 May 2008. Retrieved 4 May 2008.

References

  • Richard Harris, Discovering Timber-framed Buildings (3rd rev. ed.), Shire Publications, 1993, ISBN 0-7478-0215-7.
  • John Vince (1994). The Timbered House. Sorbus. ISBN 1-874329-75-3.

Further reading

English tradition
  • Ronald Brunskill (1992) [1981]. Traditional Buildings of England. Gollancz. ISBN 0-575-05299-6.
  • A good introductory book on carpentry and joinery from 1898 in London, England is titled Carpentry & Joinery by Frederick G. Webber and is a free ebook in the public domain: Carpentry & joinery or reprint ISBN 9781236011923 or ISBN 9781246034189.
  • Timber Buildings. Low-energy constructions. Cristina Benedetti, Bolzano 2010, Bozen-Bolzano University Press, ISBN 978-88-6046-033-2
  • For an English summary of important points presented in the Dutch language book Houten kappen in Nederland 1000–1940 (Wooden Roofs in the Netherlands: 1000–1940) use this link Herman Janse, Houten kappen in Nederland 1000–1940 · dbnl.

External links

  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Half-timber Work" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 836.
  • Jackson, Allen W. (1912). The half-timber house. The country house library. NY: McBride, Nast & Co.

timber, framing, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, september,. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Timber framing news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Timber framing German Holzfachwerk and post and beam construction are traditional methods of building with heavy timbers creating structures using squared off and carefully fitted and joined timbers with joints secured by large wooden pegs If the structural frame of load bearing timber is left exposed on the exterior of the building it may be referred to as half timbered and in many cases the infill between timbers will be used for decorative effect The country most known for this kind of architecture is Germany where timber framed houses are spread all over the country 1 2 The market square of Dornstetten Germany showing an ensemble of half timbered buildings Rue du Gros Horloge in Rouen France a city renowned for its half timbered buildings Lemgo Germany downtown The method comes from working directly from logs and trees rather than pre cut dimensional lumber Hewing this with broadaxes adzes and draw knives and using hand powered braces and augers brace and bit and other woodworking tools artisans or framers could gradually assemble a building Since this building method has been used for thousands of years in many parts of the world many styles of historic framing have developed These styles are often categorized by the type of foundation walls how and where the beams intersect the use of curved timbers and the roof framing details Contents 1 Box frame 2 Cruck frame 3 Aisled frame 4 Half timbering 4 1 Infill materials 4 2 History of the term 4 3 Oldest examples 4 4 Alternative meanings 5 Structure 5 1 Jetties 5 2 Timbers 5 3 Post construction and frame construction 5 4 Modern timber connector method 1930s 1950s 5 5 Modern features 5 6 Engineered structures 6 History and traditions 6 1 Topping out ceremony 6 2 Carpenters marks 6 3 Tools 6 4 British tradition 6 5 English styles 6 6 French tradition 6 7 German tradition Fachwerkhauser 6 8 Italy 6 9 Poland 6 10 Spain 6 11 Switzerland 6 12 Belgium 6 13 Denmark 6 14 Sweden 6 15 Norway 6 16 Netherlands 6 17 Romania 6 18 Baltic states 6 19 Americas 6 19 1 New France 6 19 2 New Netherland 6 19 3 New England 6 20 Japanese 6 21 Revival styles in later centuries 7 Advantages 8 Disadvantages 8 1 Traditional or historic structures 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksBox frame EditA simple timber frame made of straight vertical and horizontal pieces with a common rafter roof without purlins The term box frame is not well defined and has been used for any kind of framing with the usual exception of cruck framing The distinction presented here is that the roof load is carried by the exterior walls Purlins are also found even in plain timber frames Cruck frame Edit A true or full cruck half timbered building in Weobley Herefordshire England The cruck blades are the tall curved timbers which extend from near the ground to the ridge A cruck is a pair of crooked or curved timbers 3 which form a bent U S or crossframe UK the individual timbers are each called a blade More than 4 000 cruck frame buildings have been recorded in the UK Several types of cruck frames are used more information follows in English style below and at the main article Cruck True cruck or full cruck blades straight or curved extend from ground or foundation to the ridge acting as the principal rafters A full cruck does not need a tie beam Base cruck tops of the blades are truncated by the first transverse member such as by a tie beam Raised cruck blades land on masonry wall and extend to the ridge Middle cruck blades land on masonry wall and are truncated by a collar Upper cruck blades land on a tie beam very similar to knee rafters Jointed cruck blades are made from pieces joined near eaves in a number of ways See also hammerbeam roof End cruck is not a style but on the gable end of a building Half timbered houses Backnang Germany Half timbered houses Miltenberg im Odenwald Germany Rural old railway station timber framing style in Metelen GermanyAisled frame Edit Interior of a two aisled market hall Chipping Campden Gloucestershire EnglandAisled frames have one or more rows of interior posts These interior posts typically carry more structural load than the posts in the exterior walls This is the same concept of the aisle in church buildings sometimes called a hall church where the center aisle is technically called a nave However a nave is often called an aisle and three aisled barns are common in the U S the Netherlands and Germany Aisled buildings are wider than the simpler box framed or cruck framed buildings and typically have purlins supporting the rafters In northern Germany this construction is known as variations of aStanderhaus Half timbering Edit Half timbered wall with three kinds of infill wattle and daub brick and stone The plaster coating which originally covered the infill and timbers is mostly gone This building is in the central German city of Bad Langensalza Kramerbrucke in Erfurt Germany with half timbered buildings dating from c 1480 Half timbering refers to a structure with a frame of load bearing timber creating spaces between the timbers called panels in German Gefach or Facher partitions which are then filled in with some kind of nonstructural material known as infill The frame is often left exposed on the exterior of the building 4 Infill materials Edit The earliest known type of infill called opus craticum by the Romans was a wattle and daub type construction 5 Opus craticum is now confusingly applied to a Roman stone mortar infill as well Similar methods to wattle and daub were also used and known by various names such as clam staff and daub cat and clay or torchis French to name only three Wattle and daub was the most common infill in ancient times The sticks were not always technically wattlework woven but also individual sticks installed vertically horizontally or at an angle into holes or grooves in the framing The coating of daub has many recipes but generally was a mixture of clay and chalk with a binder such as grass or straw and water or urine 6 When the manufacturing of bricks increased brick infill replaced the less durable infills and became more common Stone laid in mortar as an infill was used in areas where stone rubble and mortar were available Other infills include bousillage fired brick unfired brick such as adobe or mudbrick stones sometimes called pierrotage planks as in the German standerbohlenbau timbers as in standerblockbau or rarely cob without any wooden support 7 The wall surfaces on the interior were often ceiled with wainscoting and plastered for warmth and appearance Brick infill sometimes called nogging became the standard infill after the manufacturing of bricks made them more available and less expensive Half timbered walls may be covered by siding materials including plaster weatherboarding tiles or slate shingles 8 The infill may be covered by other materials including weatherboarding or tiles 8 or left exposed When left exposed both the framing and infill were sometimes done in a decorative manner Germany is famous for its decorative half timbering and the figures sometimes have names and meanings The decorative manner of half timbering is promoted in Germany by the German Timber Frame Road several planned routes people can drive to see notable examples of Fachwerk buildings Gallery of infill types Decorative fired brick infill with owl holes Ordinary brick infill left exposed Stone infill called opus incertum by the Romans Some stone infill left visible The wattle and daub was covered with a decorated layer of plaster Like wattle and daub but with horizontal stakes Here the plaster infill itself is sculpted and decorated Top wattle and daub bottom rubblestoneGallery of some named figures and decorations Simple saltires or St Andrews crosses in Germany Two curved saltires also called St Andrews crosses during repairs to a building in Germany The infill has been removed Several forms of man figures are found in Germany this one is called a wild man A figure called an Alemannic woman Wild man center half man at the corners Relief carvings adorn some half timbered buildings The foot braces are carved with sun discs Sonnenscheiben a typical design of the North German Weser Renaissance The collection of elements in half timbering are sometimes given specific names Upper German Fachwerk from 1582 83 in Eppingen BW An example of Fachwerk in Franconia Frankisches Fachwerk Image I Metzner Fachwerk in Upper Franconia is very detailed Close studding is found in England Spain and France Square panel half timbering with fired brick infill Square paneling is typical of the Low German house and is found in England Cruck framing can be built with half timber walls This house is in the Ryedale Folk Museum in England History of the term Edit According to Craven 2019 9 the term was used informally to mean timber framed construction in the Middle Ages For economy cylindrical logs were cut in half so one log could be used for two or more posts The shaved side was traditionally on the exterior and everyone knew it to be half the timber The term half timbering is not as old as the German name Fachwerk or the French name colombage but it is the standard English name for this style One of the first people to publish the term half timbered was Mary Martha Sherwood 1775 1851 who employed it in her book The Lady of the Manor published in several volumes from 1823 to 1829 She uses the term picturesquely passing through a gate in a quickset hedge we arrived at the porch of an old half timbered cottage where an aged man and woman received us 10 By 1842 half timbered had found its way into The Encyclopedia of Architecture by Joseph Gwilt 1784 1863 This juxtaposition of exposed timbered beams and infilled spaces created the distinctive half timbered or occasionally termed Tudor style or black and white Oldest examples Edit The most ancient known half timbered building is called the House of opus craticum It was buried by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in 79 AD in Herculaneum Italy Opus craticum was mentioned by Vitruvius in his books on architecture as a timber frame with wattlework infill 11 However the same term is used to describe timber frames with an infill of stone rubble laid in mortar the Romans called opus incertum 12 Alternative meanings Edit A variation of the second meaning of half timbered the ground floor is log and the upper floor is framed half timbered in the first sense Kluge House Montana U S A less common meaning of the term half timbered is found in the fourth edition of John Henry Parker s Classic Dictionary of Architecture 1873 which distinguishes full timbered houses from half timbered with half timber houses having a ground floor in stone 13 or logs such as the Kluge House which was a log cabin with a timber framed second floor Structure Edit Joints in an ancient French roof the wooden pegs hold the mortise and tenon joinery together Projecting jettied upper storeys of an English half timbered village terraced house the jetties plainly visible This is a part of a timber frame before pegs are inserted Traditional timber framing is the method of creating framed structures of heavy timber jointed together with various joints commonly and originally with lap jointing and then later pegged mortise and tenon joints Diagonal bracing is used to prevent racking or movement of structural vertical beams or posts 14 Originally German and other master carpenters would peg the joints with allowance of about 1 inch 25 mm enough room for the wood to move as it seasoned then cut the pegs and drive the beam home fully into its socket citation needed To cope with variable sizes and shapes of hewn by adze or axe and sawn timbers two main carpentry methods were employed scribe carpentry and square rule carpentry Scribing or coping was used throughout Europe especially from the 12th century to the 19th century and subsequently imported to North America where it was common into the early 19th century In a scribe frame timber sockets are fashioned or tailor made to fit their corresponding timbers thus each timber piece must be numbered or scribed Square rule carpentry was developed in New England in the 18th century It used housed joints in main timbers to allow for interchangeable braces and girts Today standardized timber sizing means that timber framing can be incorporated into mass production methods as per the joinery industry especially where timber is cut by precision computer numerical control machinery Jetties Edit Further information Jettying A jetty is an upper floor which sometimes historically used a structural horizontal beam supported on cantilevers called a bressummer or jetty bressummer to bear the weight of the new wall projecting outward from the preceding floor or storey In the city of York in the United Kingdom the famous street known as The Shambles exemplifies this where jettied houses seem to almost touch above the street Timbers Edit The completed frame of a modern timber frame house Ridge post framing left and story framing right with jetties Historically the timbers would have been hewn square using a felling axe and then surface finished with a broadaxe If required smaller timbers were ripsawn from the hewn baulks using pitsaws or frame saws Today timbers are more commonly bandsawn and the timbers may sometimes be machine planed on all four sides The vertical timbers include posts main supports at corners and other major uprights wall studs subsidiary upright limbs in framed walls for example close studding The horizontal timbers include sill beams also called ground sills or sole pieces at the bottom of a wall into which posts and studs are fitted using tenons noggin pieces the horizontal timbers forming the tops and bottoms of the frames of infill panels wall plates at the top of timber framed walls that support the trusses and joists of the roof When jettying horizontal elements can include The jetty bressummer or breastsummer where the main sill horizontal piece on which the projecting wall above rests stretches across the whole width of the jetty wall The bressummer is itself cantilevered forward beyond the wall below it The dragon beam which runs diagonally from one corner to another and supports the corner posts above and supported by the corner posts below The jetty beams or joists conform t floor dimensions above but are at right angles to the jetty plates that conform to the shorter dimensions of roof of the floor below Jetty beams are mortised at 45 into the sides of the dragon beams They are the main constituents of the cantilever system and determine how far the jetty projects The jetty plates are designed to carry the jetty beams The jetty plates themselves are supported by the corner posts of the recessed floor below The sloping timbers include Trusses the slanting timbers forming the triangular framework at gables and roof Braces slanting beams giving extra support between horizontal or vertical members of the timber frame Herringbone bracing a decorative and supporting style of frame usually at 45 to the upright and horizontal directions of the frame Post construction and frame construction Edit There were two different systems of the position of posts and studs In the older manner called post construction the vertical elements continue from the groundwork to the roof This post construction in German is called Geschossbauweise or Standerbauweise It is somewhat similar to balloon framing method common in North America until the middle of the 20th century In the advanced manner called frame construction each story is constructed like a case and the whole building is constructed like a pile of such cases This frame construction in German is called Rahmbauweise or Stockwerksbauweise Ridge post framing is a structurally simple and ancient post and lintel framing where the posts extend all the way to the ridge beams Germans call this Firstsaule or Hochstud Modern timber connector method 1930s 1950s Edit Typical lapped joint assemblies of split ring connectors In the 1930s a system of timber framing referred to as the modern timber connector method 15 was developed It was characterized by the use of timber members assembled into trusses and other framing systems and fastened using various types of metal timber connectors This type of timber construction was used for various building types including warehouses factories garages barns stores markets recreational buildings barracks bridges and trestles 16 The use of these structures was promoted because of their low construction costs easy adaptability and performance in fire as compared to unprotected steel truss construction During World War II the United States Army Corps of Engineers and the Canadian Military Engineers undertook to construct airplane hangars using this timber construction system in order to conserve steel Wood hangars were constructed throughout North America and employed various technologies including bowstring Warren and Pratt trusses glued laminated arches and lamella roof systems Unique to this building type is the interlocking of the timber members of the roof trusses and supporting columns and their connection points The timber members are held apart by fillers blocks of timber This leaves air spaces between the timber members which improves air circulation and drying around the members which improves resistance to moisture born decay Shear plate timber connector Timber members in this type of framing system were connected with ferrous timber connectors of various types Loads between timber members were transmitted using split rings larger loads toothed rings lighter loads or spiked grid connectors 17 Split ring connectors were metal rings sandwiched between adjacent timber members to connect them together The rings were fit into circular grooves on in both timber members then the assembly was held together with through bolts The through bolts only held the assembly together but were not load carrying 16 Shear plate connectors were used to transfer loads between timber members and metal Shear plate connectors resembled large washers deformed on the side facing the timber in order to grip it and were through fastened with long bolts or lengths of threaded rod A leading manufacturer of these types of timber connectors was the Timber Engineering Company or TECO of Washington DC The proprietary name of their split ring connectors was the TECO Wedge Fit Modern features Edit Porch of a modern timber framed house A modern prefabricated building made by Huf Haus often sold as Fachwerk near West Linton Scotland In the United States and Canada timber frame construction has been revived since the 1970s and is now when experiencing a thriving renaissance of the ancient skills citation needed This is largely due to such practitioners as Steve Chappell who Jack Sobon who and Tedd Benson who who studied old plans and techniques and revived a long neglected technique Once a handcrafted skill passed down timber frame construction has now been modernized with the help of modern industrial tools such as CNC machines These machines and mass production techniques have assisted growth and made for more affordable frames and shorter lead times for projects citation needed Timber framed structures differ from conventional wood framed buildings in several ways Timber framing uses fewer larger wooden members commonly timbers in the range of 15 to 30 cm 6 to 12 in while common wood framing uses many more timbers with dimensions usually in the 5 to 25 cm 2 to 10 in range The methods of fastening the frame members also differ In conventional framing the members are joined using nails or other mechanical fasteners whereas timber framing uses the traditional mortise and tenon or more complex joints that are usually fastened using only wooden pegs citation needed Modern complex structures and timber trusses often incorporate steel joinery such as gusset plates for both structural and architectural purposes Recently it has become common practice to enclose the timber structure entirely in manufactured panels such as structural insulated panels SIPs Although the timbers can only be seen from inside the building when so enclosed construction is less complex and insulation is greater than in traditional timber building SIPs are an insulating foam core sandwiched between two structural facings typically oriented strand board according to the Structural Insulated Panel Association 18 SIPs reduce dependency on bracing and auxiliary members because the panels span considerable distances and add rigidity to the basic timber frame An alternate construction method is with concrete flooring with extensive use of glass This allows a very solid construction combined with open architecture Some firms have specialized in industrial prefabrication of such residential and light commercial structures such as Huf Haus as low energy houses or dependent on location zero energy buildings Straw bale construction is another alternative where straw bales are stacked for nonload bearing infill with various finishes applied to the interior and exterior such as stucco and plaster This appeals to the traditionalist and the environmentalist as this is using found materials to build Mudbricks also called adobe are sometimes used to fill in timber frame structures They can be made on site and offer exceptional fire resistance Such buildings must be designed to accommodate the poor thermal insulating properties of mudbrick however and usually have deep eaves or a veranda on four sides for weather protection Engineered structures Edit Timber design or wood design is a subcategory of structural engineering that focuses on the engineering of wood structures Timber is classified by tree species e g southern pine douglas fir etc and its strength is graded using numerous coefficients that correspond to the number of knots the moisture content the temperature the grain direction the number of holes and other factors There are design specifications for sawn lumber glulam members prefabricated I joists composite lumber and various connection types In the United States structural frames are then designed according to the Allowable Stress Design method or the Load Reduced Factor Design method the latter being preferred 19 History and traditions Edit Anne Hvides Gaard Svendborg Denmark from 1560 Anne Hathaway s Cottage in Warwickshire England Its timber framing is typical of vernacular Tudor architecture The techniques used in timber framing date back to Neolithic times and have been used in many parts of the world during various periods such as ancient Japan continental Europe and Neolithic Denmark England France Germany Spain parts of the Roman Empire and Scotland 20 The timber framing technique has historically been popular in climate zones which favour deciduous hardwood trees such as oak Its most northernmost areas are Baltic countries and southern Sweden Timber framing is rare in Russia Finland northern Sweden and Norway where tall and straight lumber such as pine and spruce is readily available and log houses were favored instead Half timbered construction in the Northern European vernacular building style is characteristic of medieval and early modern Denmark England Germany and parts of France and Switzerland where timber was in good supply yet stone and associated skills to dress the stonework were in short supply In half timbered construction timbers that were riven split in half provided the complete skeletal framing of the building Europe is full of timber framed structures dating back hundreds of years including manors castles homes and inns whose architecture and techniques of construction have evolved over the centuries In Asia timber framed structures are found many of them temples Some Roman carpentry preserved in anoxic layers of clay at Romano British villa sites demonstrate that sophisticated Roman carpentry had all the necessary techniques for this construction The earliest surviving French half timbered buildings date from the 12th century Important resources for the study and appreciation of historic building methods are open air museums Topping out ceremony Edit The topping out ceremony is a builders rite an ancient tradition thought to have originated in Scandinavia by 700 AD 21 In the U S a bough or small tree is attached to the peak of the timber frame after the frame is complete as a celebration Historically it was common for the master carpenter to give a speech make a toast and then break the glass In Northern Europe a wreath made for the occasion is more commonly used rather than a bough In Japan the ridge raising is a religious ceremony called the jotoshiki 22 In Germany it is called the Richtfest Carpenters marks Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carpenters marks Carpenters marks are markings left on the timbers of wooden buildings during construction Assembly or marriage marks were used to identify the individual timbers Assembly marks include numbering to identify the pieces of the frame The numbering can be similar to Roman numerals except the number four is IIII and nine is VIIII These marks are chiseled cut with a race knife a tool to cut lines and circles in wood or saw cuts The numbering can also be in Arabic numerals which are often written with a red grease pencil or crayon German and French carpenters made some unique marks Abbundzeichen German assembly marks Layout marks left over from marking out identify the place where to cut joints and bore peg holes carpenters also marked the location on a timber where they had levelled it as part of the building process and called these level lines sometimes they made a mark two feet from a critical location which was then called the two foot mark These marks are typically scratched on the timber with an awl like tool until later in the 19th century when they started using pencils Occasionally carpenters or owners marked a date and or their initials in the wood but not like masons left masons marks Boards on the building may have tally marks cut into them which were numbers used to keep track of quantities of lumber timber Other markings in old buildings are called ritual marks which were often signs the occupants felt would protect them from harm Tools Edit German carpenters in 1880 The tools from left to right are a cart loaded with timbers rough hewing with felling axes in the green coat is the master carpenter carrying his tools including a frame saw on the ground a ring dog precursor to the cant dog and peavey in the background sawyers pit sawing on trestles on right carpenters striking a mortising chisel with a mallet and boring a hole with a T auger lower right on ground a two man crosscut saw steel square broadaxe and hard to see a froe Many historic hand tools used by timber framers for thousands of years have similarities but vary in shape Electrically powered tools first became available in the 1920s in the U S and continue to evolve See the list of timber framing tools for basic descriptions and images of unusual tools The list is incomplete at this time British tradition Edit The timber framed Staple Inn in Holborn London Some of the earliest known timber houses in Europe have been found in Great Britain dating to Neolithic times Balbridie and Fengate are some of the rare examples of these constructions Molded plaster ornamentation pargetting 23 further enriched some English Tudor architecture houses Half timbering is characteristic of English vernacular architecture in East Anglia 24 Warwickshire 25 26 Worcestershire 27 Herefordshire 28 29 Shropshire 30 31 and Cheshire 32 where one of the most elaborate surviving English examples of half timbered construction is Little Moreton Hall 33 In South Yorkshire the oldest timber house in Sheffield the Bishops House c 1500 shows traditional half timbered construction In the Weald of Kent and Sussex 34 the half timbered structure of the Wealden hall house 35 consisted of an open hall with bays on either side and often jettied upper floors Half timbered construction traveled with British colonists to North America in the early 17th century but was soon abandoned in New England and the mid Atlantic colonies for clapboard facings an East Anglia tradition The original English colonial settlements such as Plymouth Massachusetts and Jamestown Virginia had timber framed buildings rather than the log cabins often associated with the American frontier Living history programs demonstrating the building technique are available at both these locations Farmhouse in Wormshill Kent England Historic timber framed houses in Warwick England Intersection of Shambles and Little Shambles streets York England Bessie Surtees House Quayside Newcastle upon Tyne England The President s Lodge Queens College Cambridge England The south range of Little Moreton Hall Cheshire England The Yeoman s House Bignor West Sussex England a three bay Wealden hall house The Crooked House Lavenham Suffolk EnglandOne of the surviving streets lined with almost touching houses is known as The Shambles York and is a very popular tourist attraction English styles Edit For Timber framed houses in Wales see Architecture of WalesHistoric timber frame construction in England and the rest of the United Kingdom showed regional variation 36 which has been divided into the eastern school the western school and the northern school although the characteristic types of framing in these schools can be found in the other regions except the northern school 37 A characteristic of the eastern school is close studding which is a half timbering style of many studs spaced about the width of the studs apart for example six inch studs spaced six inches apart until the middle of the 16th century and sometimes wider spacing after that time Close studding was an elite style found mostly on expensive buildings A principal style of the western school is the use of square panels of roughly equal size and decorative framing utilizing many shapes such as lozenges stars crosses quatrefoils cusps and many other shapes 37 The northern school sometimes used posts which landed on the foundation rather than on a sill beam the sill joining to the sides of the posts and called an interrupted sill Another northern style was to use close studding but in a herring bone or chevron pattern 37 Roof structure of the Barley Barn Cressing Temple EssexAs houses were modified to cope with changing demands there sometimes were a combination of styles within a single timber frame construction 38 The major types of historic framing in England are cruck frame 38 box frame 38 and aisled construction From the box frame more complex framed buildings such as the Wealden House and Jettied house developed citation needed The cruck frame design is among the earliest and was 38 in use by the early 13th century with its use continuing to the present day although rarely after the 18th century 38 Since the 18th century however many existing cruck structures have been modified with the original cruck framework becoming hidden citation needed Aisled barns are of two or three aisled types the oldest surviving aisled barn being the barley barn at Cressing Temple 37 dated to 1205 35 39 Jettying was introduced in the 13th century and continued to be used through the 16th century 37 Generally speaking the size of timbers used in construction and the quality of the workmanship reflect the wealth and status of their owners Small cottages often used quite small cross section timbers which would have been deemed unsuitable by others Some of these small cottages also have a very home made even temporary appearance Many such example can be found in the English shires Equally some relatively small buildings can be seen to incorporate substantial timbers and excellent craftsmanship reflecting the relative wealth and status of their original owners Important resources for the study of historic building methods in the UK are open air museums It is often claimed that timber framed buildings in Britain contain reused ships timbers This belief is dismissed by experts who point out that curved timbers are rarely suitable that salt is destructive to cellulose in the wood and that ships timbers are generally slight compared to cruck trusses 40 French tradition Edit Coupesarte Manor Normandy France Elaborately half timbered houses of the 13th through 18th centuries still remain in Bourges Tours Troyes Rouen Thiers Dinan Rennes and many other cities except in Provence and Corsica Timber framing in French is known colloquially as pan de bois and half timbering as colombage Alsace is the region with the most timbered houses in France The Normandy tradition features two techniques frameworks were built of four evenly spaced regularly hewn timbers set into the ground poteau en terre or into a continuous wooden sill poteau de sole and mortised at the top into the plate The openings were filled with many materials including mud and straw wattle and daub or horsehair and gypsum 41 Half timbered houses in Tours Centre France Old houses in Troyes Champagne France Half timbered houses in Chalons en Champagne Champagne France Church of Drosnay Champagne France Old houses in Rennes Brittany France 14th century early corbelled house Rouen Normandy France 15th century manor Saint Sulpice de Grimbouville Normandy France 16th century house in Albi Occitanie France Framing of the roof Notre Dame Paris Illustration by Eugene Viollet le Duc Trinity Church of Langonnet Brittany France German tradition Fachwerkhauser Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Timber framing in Germany Germany has several styles of timber framing but probably the greatest number of half timbered buildings in the world are to be found in Germany and in Alsace France There are many small towns which escaped both war damage and modernisation and consist mainly or even entirely of half timbered houses Idstein Hesse on the German Timber Frame Road The Spitzhauschen a very narrow timber frame house in Bernkastel at the river Moselle built in 1417 The German Timber Frame Road Deutsche Fachwerkstrasse is a tourist route that connects towns with remarkable fachwerk It is more than 2 000 km 1 200 mi long crossing Germany through the states of Lower Saxony Saxony Anhalt Hesse Thuringia Bavaria and Baden Wurttemberg 14 42 Some of the more prominent towns among many include Quedlinburg a UNESCO listed town which has over 1200 half timbered houses spanning five centuries Goslar another UNESCO listed town Hanau Steinheim home of the Brothers Grimm Bad Urach Eppingen Romance city with a half timbered church dating from 1320 Mosbach Vaihingen an der Enz and nearby UNESCO listed Maulbronn Abbey Schorndorf birthplace of Gottlieb Daimler Calw Celle and Biberach an der Riss with both the largest medieval complex the Holy Spirit Hospital and one of Southern Germany s oldest buildings now the Braith Mali Museum dated to 1318 German fachwerk building styles are extremely varied with a huge number of carpentry techniques which are highly regionalized German planning laws for the preservation of buildings and regional architecture preservation dictate that a half timbered house must be authentic to regional or even city specific designs before being accepted 43 44 A brief overview of styles follows as a full inclusion of all styles is impossible In general the northern states have fachwerk very similar to that of the nearby Netherlands and England while the more southerly states most notably Bavaria and Switzerland have more decoration using timber because of greater forest reserves in those areas During the 19th century a form of decorative timber framing called bundwerk became popular in Bavaria Austria and South Tyrol The German fachwerkhaus usually has a foundation of stone or sometimes brick perhaps up to several feet a couple of metres high which the timber framework is mortised into or more rarely supports an irregular wooden sill The three main forms may be divided geographically West Central Germany and Franconia In West Central German and Franconian timber work houses particularly in the Central Rhine and Moselle the windows most commonly lie between the rails of the sills and lintels Northern Germany Central Germany and East German In Saxony and around the Harz foothills angle braces often form fully extended triangles Lower Saxon houses have a joist for every post Holstein fachwerk houses are famed for their massive 12 inch 30 cm beams Southern Germany including the Black and Bohemian Forests In Swabia Wurttemberg Alsace and Switzerland the use of the lap joint is thought to be the earliest method of connecting the wall plates and tie beams and is particularly identified with Swabia A later innovation also pioneered in Swabia was the use of tenons builders left timbers to season which were held in place by wooden pegs i e tenons The timbers were initially placed with the tenons left an inch or two out of intended position and later driven home after becoming fully seasoned The most characteristic feature is the spacing between the posts and the high placement of windows Panels are enclosed by a sill posts and a plate and are crossed by two rails between which the windows are placed like two eyes peering out 43 44 In addition there is a myriad of regional scrollwork and fretwork designs of the non loadbearing large timbers braces peculiar to particularly wealthy towns or cities A unique type of timber frame house can be found in the region where the borders of Germany the Czech Republic and Poland meet it is called the Upper Lusatian house Umgebindehaus translates as round framed house This type has a timber frame surrounding a log structure on part of the ground floor citation needed Standerbau in Quedlinburg Germany Wordgasse 3 built in 1346 in the past suggested as the oldest timber frame house in Germany nowadays 3 older houses are known only in Quedlinburg Timber frame town hall of Wernigerode House in Rothenburg Bavaria The Plonlein i e little place the worldwide known timber frame ensemble as the southern end of the Old town in Rothenburg Buildings in Hornburg Buildings in Braubach 16th century first half House in Schwerin built in 1698 Gelbensande Castle a hunting lodge built in 1887 near Rostock The half timbered houses in Dinkelsbuhl mostly have plastered and painted facades An Umgebindehaus in Oybin Saxony The timber frame is outside a log wall on the ground floor 20th century timber framing in Ribnitz Mecklenburg Fachwerk timber framing under construction in 2013 Tirschenreuth Half timbered mansion of the former Zirkelmuhle in Mellenbach Glasbach Thuringia Italy Edit Several half timbered houses can be found in Northern Italy especially in Piedmont Lombardy in the city of Bologna in Sardinia in the Barbagia region and in the Iglesiente mining region Half timbered house in Ozzano Monferrato Piedmont Half timbered house in Biella Piedmont Half timbered house in Arquata Scrivia Piedmont Half timbered house in Monza Lombardy half timbered house in Susa Piedmont A very rare example of a half timbered house in Central Italy in Spoleto Umbria Poland Edit Timber frame house in central Poznan Poland The Churches of Peace in southwestern Poland are the largest religious timberframed structures in Europe Historically the majority of Polish cities as well as their central marketplaces possessed timber framed dwellings and housing 45 Throughout the Middle Ages it was customary in Poland to use either bare brick or wattle and daub Polish szachulec as filling in between the timber frame 45 However the half timbered houses which can be observed nowadays have been built in regions that were historically German or had significant German cultural influence As these regions were at some point parts of German Prussia half timbered walls are often called mur pruski lit Prussian wall in Polish A distinctive type of house associated with mostly Mennonite immigrant groups from Frisia and the Netherlands known as the Oledrzy is called an arcade house dom podcieniowy The biggest timber framed religious buildings in Europe are the Churches of Peace in southwestern Poland 46 There are also numerous examples of timber framed secular structures such as the granaries in Bydgoszcz The Umgebindehaus rural housing tradition of south Saxony Germany is also found in the neighboring areas of Poland particularly in the Silesian region Another world class type of wooden building Poland shares with some neighboring countries are its wooden church buildings Timber frame architecture Mill Island Bydgoszcz Wheelwright croft in Zgorzelec Antoniow Lower Silesian Voivodeship Granary in Bydgoszcz built in 1795 upon 15th century gothic cellar Sts Peter amp Paul Church in Sulow Trutnowy Mennonite arcade house 19th century timber frame manor house in TorunSpain Edit The Spanish generally follow the Mediterranean forms of architecture with stone walls and shallow roof pitch Timber framing is often of the post and lintel style Castile and Leon par example La Alberca and the Basque Country have the most representative examples of the use of timber framing in the Iberian Peninsula Most traditional Basque buildings with half timbering elements are detached farm houses in Basque baserriak Their upper floors were built with jettied box frames in close studding In the oldest farmsteads and if existing in the third floor the walls were sometimes covered with vertical weatherboards Big holes were left in the gable of the main facade for ventilation The wooden beams were painted over mostly in dark red The vacancies were filled in with wattle and daub or rubble laid in a clay mortar and then plastered over with white chalk or nogged with bricks Although the entire supporting structure is made of wood the timbering is only visible on the main facade which is generally oriented to the southeast Although the typical Basque house is now mostly associated with half timbering the outer walls and the fire walls were built in masonry rubble stone bricks or ideally ashlars whenever it could be afforded Timber was a sign of poverty Oak wood was cheaper than masonry that is why when the money was running out the upper floor walls were mostly built timbered Extant baserriak with half timbered upper floor facades were built from the 15th to 19th centuries and are found in all Basque regions with oceanic climate except in Zuberoa Soule but are concentrated in Lapurdi Labourd Some medieval Basque tower houses Dorretxe eu feature an overhanged upper floor in half timbering To a lesser extent timbered houses are also found in villages and towns as row houses as the photo from the Uztaritz village shows Currently it has again become popular to build Neobasque fr houses resembling old Basque farmsteads with more or less respect for the principles of traditional half timbered building Inharri baserri in Ibarron Lapurdi Aranguren dorretxea Orozko Bizkaia Half timbered houses from Uztarritz Lapurdi Timbered house from Guadilla de Villamar Spain Popular style Switzerland Edit An exceptional fachwerk house called Eglihaus in Hombrechtikon Switzerland Switzerland has many styles of timber framing which overlap with its neighboring countries Belgium Edit Nowadays timber framing is primarily found in the provinces of Limburg Liege and Luxembourg In urban areas the ground floor was formerly built in stone and the upper floors in timber framing Also as timber framing was seen as a cheaper way of building often the visible structures of noble houses were in stone and bricks and the invisible or lateral walls in timber framing The open air museums of Bokrijk and Saint Hubert Fourneau Saint Michel show many examples of Belgian timber framing Many post and beam houses can be found in cities and villages but unlike France the United Kingdom and Germany there are few fully timber framed cityscapes The house where Andre Gretry was born in Liege The Sugny House 18th century in the Fourneau Saint Michel Museum A House in Theux 17th century The former water mill of Lierneux Small chapel shrine at the Bokrijk Open Air Museum Unskilled worker s thatched cottage Hingeon 19th century transplanted and reconstituted in the open air museum Fourneau Saint Michel Timber frame structure in BrugesDenmark Edit Timber frame bindingsvaerk literally binding work is the traditional building style in almost all of Denmark making it the only Nordic country where this style is prevalent in all regions Along the west coast of Jutland houses built entirely of bricks were traditionally more common due to lack of suitable wood In the 19th and especially in the 20th century bricks have been the preferred building material in all of Denmark but traditional timber frame houses remain common both in the towns and in the countryside Different regions have different traditions as to whether the timber frame should be tarred and thus clearly visible or be limewashed or painted in the same colour as the infills Sweden Edit The Swedish mostly built log houses but they do have traditions of several types of timber framing Some of the following links are written in Swedish Most of the half timbered houses in Sweden were built during the Danish time and are located in what until 1658 used to be Danish territory in southern Sweden primarily in the province Skane and secondarily in Blekinge and Halland In Swedish half timber is known as korsvirke Stave construction is called stavverk Scandinavia is famous for its ancient stave churches Stave construction is a traditional timber frame with walls of vertical planks the posts and planks landing in a sill on a foundation Similar construction with earthfast posts is called stolpteknik and Palisade construction where many vertical wall timbers or planks have their feet buried in the ground called post in ground or earthfast construction is called palissadteknik see also Palisade church Swedish plank frame construction is called skiftesverk This is a traditional timber frame with walls of horizontal planks Norway Edit Norway has at least two significant types of timber framed structures the stave church and Grindverk no The term stave a post or pole indicates that a stave church essentially means a framed church a distinction made in a region where log building is common All but one surviving stave churches are in Norway one in Sweden Replicas of stave churches and other Norwegian building types have been reproduced elsewhere e g at the Scandinavian Heritage Park in North Dakota United States Grindverk translates as trestle construction consisting of a series of transversal frames of two posts and a connecting beam supporting two parallel wall plates bearing the rafters Unlike other types of timber framing in Europe the trestle frame construction uses no mortise and tenon joints Archaeological excavations have uncovered similar wooden joints from more than 3 000 years ago suggesting that this type of framing is an ancient unbroken tradition Grindverk buildings are only found on part of the western coast of Norway and most of them are boathouses and barns Log building was the common construction used for housing humans and livestock in Norway from the middle ages until the 18th century Timber framing of the type used in large parts of Europe appeared occasionally in late medieval towns but never became common except for the capital Christiania After a fire in 1624 in Oslo King Christian IV ordered the town to be relocated to a new site He outlawed log building to prevent future conflagrations and required wealthy burghers to use brickwork and the less affluent to use timber framing in the Danish manner During the next two centuries 50 per cent of the houses were timber framed All of these buildings disappeared as a consequence of this small provincial town of Christiania becoming the capital of independent Norway in 1814 This caused a rapid growth with the population rising from 10 000 to 250 000 by 1900 Increasing prices caused a massive urban renewal which resulted in all wooden structures being replaced with office blocks Borgund stave church in Laerdal Sogn og Fjordane country Norway Garmo Stave Church detail Note how the sills lap and the post fits around the sills The post is the stave from which these buildings are named Kaupanger stave church interior Kaupanger Norway An example of grindverk framing The tie beams are captured in slots in the post tops Frogner Manor in Oslo timber framed building 1750 extended 1790 Brugata 14 Oslo Timber framed building from around 1800 Netherlands Edit A half timbered building without the infill in Limburg Netherlands The Netherlands is often overlooked for its timbered houses yet many exist including windmills It was in North Holland where the import of cheaper timber combined with the Dutch innovation of windmill powered sawmills allowed economically viable widespread use of protective wood covering over framework In the late 17th century the Dutch introduced vertical cladding also known in Eastern England as clasp board and in western England as weatherboard then as more wood was available more cheaply horizontal cladding in the 17th century Perhaps owing to economic considerations vertical cladding returned to fashion 47 Dutch wall framing is virtually always built in bents and the three basic types of roof framing are the rafter roof purlin roof and ridge post roof 48 Romania Edit Half timbered houses can be found in Romania mostly in areas once inhabited by Transylvanian Saxons in cities towns and villages with Germanic influence such as Bistrița Brașov Mediaș Sibiu and Sighișoara However the number of half timbered houses is very small In Wallachia there are few examples of this type of architecture most of those buildings being located in Sinaia such as the Peleș Castle The Pelișor Castle in Sinaia Peleș Castle Olimpia Sports Complex Brașov A half timbered building in Sinaia Baltic states Edit As the result of centuries of German settlement and cultural influence towns in the Baltic states such as Klaipeda and Riga also preserve German style Fachwerkhauser Americas Edit Main article American historic carpentry Most haft timbered houses existing in Missouri Pennsylvania and Texas were built by German settlers 41 Old Salem North Carolina has fine examples of German fachwerk buildings 49 Many are still present in Colonia Tovar Venezuela Santa Catarina and Rio Grande do Sul Brazil where Germans settled Later they chose more suitable building materials for local conditions most likely because of the great problem of tropical termites New France Edit In the historical region of North America known as New France colombage pierrote also called maconnerie entre poteaux 50 half timbered construction with the infill between the posts and studs of stone rubble and lime plaster or bousillage 50 and simply called colombage in France Colombage was used from the earliest settlement until the 18th century but was known as bousillage entre poteaus sur solle in Lower Louisiana The style had its origins in Normandy and was brought to Canada by very early Norman settlers The Men s House at Lower Fort Garry is a good example The exterior walls of such buildings were often covered over with clapboards to protect the infill from erosion Naturally this required frequent maintenance and the style was abandoned as a building method in the 18th century in Quebec For the same reasons half timbering in New England which was originally employed by the English settlers fell out of favour soon after the colonies had become established Other variations of half timbering are colombage a teurques torchis straw coated with mud and hung over horizontal staves or otherwise held in place colombage an eclisses and colombage a lattes 50 Poteaux en terre posts in ground is a type of timber framing with the many vertical posts or studs buried in the ground called post in ground or earthfast construction The tops of the posts are joined to a beam and the spaces between are filled in with natural materials called bousillage or pierrotage Poteaux sur sol posts on a sill is a general term for any kind of framing on a sill However sometimes it specifically refers to vertical log construction like poteaux en terre placed on sills with the spaces between the timbers infilled Piece sur piece also known as Post and plank style or corner post construction and many other names in which wood is used both for the frame and horizontal infill for this reason it may be incorrect to call it half timbering It is sometimes a blend of framing and log building with two styles the horizontal pieces fit into groves in the posts and can slide up and down or the horizontal pieces fit into individual mortises in the posts and are pegged and the gaps between the pieces chinked filled in with stones or chips of wood covered with mud or moss briefly discussed in Log cabin This technique of a timber frame walls filled in with horizontal planks or logs proved better suited to the harsh climates of Quebec and Acadia which at the same time had abundant wood It became very popular throughout New France as far afield as southern Louisiana The Hudson s Bay Company used this technique for many of its trading posts and this style of framing becoming known as Hudson Bay style or Hudson Bay corners Also used by the Red River Colony this style also became known as Red River Framing The support of horizontal timbers by corner posts is an old form of construction in Europe It was apparently carried across much of the continent from Silesia by the Lausitz urnfield culture in the late Bronze Age 51 Similar building techniques are apparently not found in France 52 but exist in Germany and Switzerland known as Bohlenstanderbau when planks are used or blockstanderbau when beams are used as the infill In Sweden known as sleppvegg or skiftesverk and in Denmark as bulhus A particularly interesting example in the U S is the Golden Plough Tavern c 1741 York York County PA which has the ground level of corner post construction with the second floor of fachwerk half timbered and was built for a German with other Germanic features 53 Settlers in New France also built horizontal log brick and stone buildings New Netherland Edit Characteristics of traditional timber framing in the parts of the U S formerly known as New Netherland are H framing also known as dropped tie framing in the U S and the similar anchor beam framing as found in the New World Dutch barn New England Edit Some time periods regions within New England contain certain framing elements such as common purlin roofs five sided ridge beams plank frame construction and plank wall construction The English barn always contains an English tying joint and the later New England style barn were built using bents Japanese Edit Wall framing of a Japanese house under construction Japanese timber framing is believed to be descended from Chinese framing see Ancient Chinese wooden architecture Asian framing is significantly different from western framing with its predominant use of post and lintel framing and an almost complete lack of diagonal bracing Revival styles in later centuries Edit The Saitta House Dyker Heights Brooklyn New York built in 1899 has half timber decoration 54 When half timbering regained popularity in Britain after 1860 in the various revival styles such as the Queen Anne style houses by Richard Norman Shaw and others it was often used to evoke a Tudor atmosphere see Tudorbethan though in Tudor times half timbering had begun to look rustic and was increasingly limited to village houses illustration above left In 1912 Allen W Jackson published The Half Timber House Its Origin Design Modern Plan and Construction and rambling half timbered beach houses appeared on dune front properties in Rhode Island or under palm lined drives of Beverly Hills During the 1920s increasingly minimal gestures towards some half timbering in commercial speculative housebuilding saw the fashion diminish In the revival styles such as Tudorbethan Mock Tudor the half timbered appearance is superimposed on the brickwork or other material as an outside decorative facade rather than forming the main frame that supports the structure The style was used in many of the homes built in Lake Mohawk New Jersey as well as all of the clubhouse shops and marina For information about roundwood framing see the book Roundwood Timber Framing Building Naturally Using Local Resources by Ben Law East Meon Hampshire Permanent Publications 2010 ISBN 1856230414 Advantages EditThe use of timber framing in buildings offers various aesthetic and structural benefits as the timber frame lends itself to open plan designs and allows for complete enclosure in effective insulation for energy efficiency In modern construction a timber frame structure offers many benefits It is rapidly erected A moderately sized timber frame home can be erected within 2 to 3 days It is well suited to prefabrication modular construction and mass production Timbers can be pre fit within bents or wall sections and aligned with a jig in a shop without the need for a machine or hand cut production line This allows faster erection on site and more precise alignments Valley and hip timbers are not typically pre fitted As an alternative to the traditional infill methods the frame can be encased with SIPs This stage of preparing the assembled frame for the installation of windows mechanical systems and roofing is known as drying in it can be customized with carvings or incorporate heirloom structures such as barns etc it can use recycled or otherwise discarded timbers it offers some structural benefits as the timber frame if properly engineered lends itself to better seismic survivability 55 Consequently there are many half timbered houses which still stand despite the foundation having partially caved in over the centuries The generally larger spaces between the frames enable greater flexibility in the placement at construction or afterwards of windows and doors with less resulting weakening of the structural integrity and the need for heavy lintels In North America heavy timber construction is classified Building Code Type IV a special class reserved for timber framing which recognizes the inherent fire resistance of large timber and its ability to retain structural capacity in fire situations In many cases this classification can eliminate the need and expense of fire sprinklers in public buildings 56 Disadvantages EditTraditional or historic structures Edit In terms of the traditional half timber or fachwerkhaus there are maybe more disadvantages than advantages today Such houses are notoriously expensive to maintain let alone renovate and restore most commonly owing to local regulations that do not allow divergence from the original modification or incorporation of modern materials Additionally in such nations as Germany where energy efficiency is highly regulated the renovated building may be required to meet modern energy efficiencies if it is to be used as a residential or commercial structure museums and significant historic buildings have no semi permanent habitade exempt Many framework houses of significance are treated merely to preserve rather than render inhabitable most especially as the required heavy insecticidal fumigation is highly poisonous In some cases it is more economical to build anew using authentic techniques and correct period materials than restore One major problem with older structures is the phenomenon known as mechano sorptive creep or slanting where wood beams absorb moisture whilst under compression or tension strains and deform shift position or both This is a major structural issue as the house may deviate several degrees from perpendicular to its foundations in the x axis y axis and even z axis and thus be unsafe and unstable or so out of square it is extremely costly to remedy 57 A summary of problems with Fachwerkhauser or half timbered houses includes the following though many can be avoided by thoughtful design and application of suitable paints and surface treatments and routine maintenance Often though when dealing with a structure of a century or more old it is too late 47 slanting thermo mechanical weather seasonally induced and mechano sorptive moisture induced creep of wood in tension and compression 57 poor prevention of capillary movement of water within any exposed timber leading to afore described creep or rot eaves that are too narrow or non existent thus allowing total exposure to rain and snow too much exterior detailing that does not allow adequate rainwater run off timber ends joints and corners poorly protected through coatings shape or position non beveled vertical beams posts and clapboards allow water absorption and retention through capillary action surface point or coatings allowed to deteriorate traditional gypsum or wattle and daub containing organic materials animal hair straw manure which then decompose in both poteaux en terre and poteaux sur sol insect fungus or bacterial decomposition rot including dry rot infestation of xylophagous pest organisms such as very common in Europe the Ptinidae family particularly the common furniture beetle termites cockroaches powderpost beetles mice and rats quite famously so in many children s stories Noise from footsteps in adjacent rooms above below and on the same floor in such buildings can be quite audible This is often resolved with built up floor systems involving clever sound isolation and absorption techniques and at the same time providing passage space for plumbing wiring and even heating and cooling equipment Other fungi that are non destructive to the wood but are harmful to humans such as black mold These fungi may also thrive on many modern building materials Wood burns more readily than some other materials making timber frame buildings somewhat more susceptible to fire damage although this idea is not universally accepted Since the cross sectional dimensions of many structural members exceed 15 cm 15 cm 6 6 timber frame structures benefit from the unique properties of large timbers which char on the outside forming an insulated layer that protects the rest of the beam from burning 58 59 prior flood or soil subsidence damageSee also EditAmerican historic carpentry Boat building Berg house Carpentry Engineered wood Glue laminated timber Cross laminated timber Framing construction Balloon framing Platform framing German Timber Frame Road Woodworking joints Norman architecture Open air museum Vernacular architecture WeatherboardingNotes Edit Deutsche Welle Nemeckij fahverk DW 14 July 2021 DW COM in Russian Retrieved 15 July 2021 Timber framing A rediscovered technique for building a home Walls with Stories 17 June 2017 Retrieved 15 July 2021 Oxford English Dictionary Nikolas Davies Erkki Jokiniemi 2008 Dictionary of architecture and building construction Architectural Press ISBN 978 0 7506 8502 3 726 pages pp 181 Vitruvious On Architecture translated in 1931 from the eighth century Latin Book II Chapter 8 paragraph 20 Sunshine Paula Wattle and daub Princes Risborough Shire Publications 2006 7 8 Print ISBN 0747806527 Glick Thomas F Steven John Livesey and Faith Wallis Medieval science technology and medicine an encyclopedia New York Routledge 2005 229 Print ISBN 0415969301 a b Pollard Richard Nikolaus Pevsner 2006 The Buildings of England Lancashire Liverpool and the South West New Haven and London Yale University Press pp 710 711 ISBN 0 300 10910 5 Craven Jackie 3 July 2019 The Look of Medieval Half Timbered Construction Retrieved 20 April 2022 Sherwood Mary Martha 1827 The lady of the manor being a series of conversations on the subject of confirmation Intended for the use of the middle and higher ranks of young females Vol 5 Wellington Salop London F Houlston and Son p 168 Retrieved 20 April 2022 LacusCurtius Vitruvius de Architectura Liber Secundus penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 1 May 2018 Wilson Nigel Guy Encyclopedia of ancient Greece London Routledge 2006 82 Print ISBN 0415973341 Joyn Henry Parker 1875 Classic Dictionary of Architecture 4th ed Facsimile published in 1986 by New Orchard Editions Poole Dorset pp 178 179 a b Nortrud G Schrammel Schal Karl Kessler Paul Georg Custodis Kreisverwaltung des Westerwaldkreises in Montabaur Fachwerk im Westerwald Landschaftsmuseum Westerwald Hachenburg Ausstellung vom 11 September 1987 bis 30 April 1988 Landschaftsmuseum Westerwald 1987 ISBN 978 3 921548 37 0 78 pages National Lumber Manufacturer s Association Airplane hangar Construction Construction Information Series Lumber and It s Utilization vol IV ch 8 1941 a b TECO Timber Engineering Company Specify Timber with the TECO System for Industrial and Commercial Structures 1950 Raser Wm V 1941 Modern Timber Connectors for Modern Timber Structures Unpublished master s thesis Corvallis OR School of Forestry Oregon State College Retrieved 20 April 2022 via Scholars Archive at OSU What Are SIPs Archived from the original on 10 February 2013 Retrieved 1 February 2013 National Design Specification for Wood Construction American Wood Council 2018 Retrieved 13 December 2018 Williams J H 1971 Roman Building Materials in South East England Britannia Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies 2 166 195 doi 10 2307 525807 JSTOR 525807 S2CID 162393242 Retrieved 20 April 2022 Robert J Abrams in Why Do Clocks Run Clockwise And Other Imponderables Aquarium Tennessee Tennessee Aquarium tnaqua org Archived from the original on 11 August 2016 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Pargetting on the White Horse Pleshey C Colin Smith geograph org uk Archived from the original on 5 August 2016 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Half timbered house in Laxfield C Toby Speight geograph org uk Archived from the original on 5 August 2016 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Shakespeare s Birthplace in Stratford C Frederick Blake geograph org uk Archived from the original on 1 May 2018 Retrieved 1 May 2018 The Shakespeare Hotel Stratford Upon Avon OS grid SP2054 Geograph Britain and Ireland photograph every grid square Geograph org uk Archived from the original on 7 July 2012 Retrieved 29 April 2012 Huddington Court C Richard Dunn geograph org uk Archived from the original on 5 August 2016 Retrieved 1 May 2018 West End Farm Pembridge Herefordshire C Doug Elliot geograph org uk Archived from the original on 5 August 2016 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Pembridge Market Hall and New Inn OS grid SO3958 Geograph Britain and Ireland photograph every grid square Geograph org uk 10 April 2006 Archived from the original on 8 July 2012 Retrieved 29 April 2012 The Feathers Hotel Ludlow C Humphrey Bolton geograph org uk Archived from the original on 5 August 2016 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Historic buildings in Ludlow OS grid SO5174 Geograph Britain and Ireland photograph every grid square Geograph org uk 24 February 2007 Archived from the original on 8 July 2012 Retrieved 29 April 2012 Half timbered building C Andy and Hilary geograph org uk Archived from the original on 5 August 2016 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Little Moreton Hall Cheshire C Pam Brophy geograph org uk Archived from the original on 5 August 2016 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Spreadeagle Hotel 1430 Midhurst C Pam Brophy geograph org uk Archived from the original on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 1 May 2018 Wealden house Geograph org uk Archived from the original on 15 July 2012 Retrieved 29 April 2012 Cruck Construction an introduction and catalogue CBA Research Report 42 pp 61 92 a b c d e Brown R J Timber framed buildings of England London R Hale Ltd 1997 46 48 ISBN 0709060920 a b c d e Vince J The Timbered House Sorbus 1994 ISBN 1 874329 75 3 Bettley James and Nikolaus Pevsner Essex The Buildings of England New Haven Conn Yale University Press 2007 313 ISBN 0300116144 McKenna Laurie 1994 Timber Framed Buildings in Cheshire Cheshire County Council p 69 ISBN 0906765161 a b Charles Van Ravenswaay 2006 The arts and architecture of German settlements in Missouri a survey of a vanishing culture University of Missouri Press 2006 ISBN 978 0 8262 1700 4 539 pages Heinrich Edel 1928 Die Fachwerkhauser der Stadt Braunschweig ein kunst und kulturhistorisches Bild Druckerei Appelhaus 1928 a b Wilhelm Suvern 1971 Torbogen und Inschriften lippischer Fachwerkhauser in Volume 7 of Heimatland Lippe Lippe Heimatbund 1971 48 pages a b Heinrich Stiewe 2007 Fachwerkhauser in Deutschland Konstruktion Gestalt und Nutzung vom Mittelalter bis heute Primus Verlag 2007 ISBN 978 3 89678 589 3 160 pages a b www eura7 com Agencja interaktywna EURA7 Domy z szachulca czyli co laczy Sudety i Pomorze Gdanskie www foveotech pl Palac Jugowice a b Lars Bostrom editor 1st International RILEM Symposium on Timber Engineering Stockholm Sweden 13 14 September 1999 Volume 8 of RILEM proceedings RILEM Publications 1999 ISBN 978 2 912143 10 5 838 pages 317 327 Herman Janse Houten kappen in Nederland 1000 1940 Delftse Universitaire Pers Delft Rijksdienst voor de Monumentenzorg Zeist 1989 translations are mine Noble Allen George and M Margaret Geib Wood brick and stone the North American settlement landscape Amherst University of Massachusetts Press 1984 42 43 a b c colombage pierrote def 1 Edwards Jay Dearborn and Nicolas Verton A Creole lexicon architecture landscape people Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 2004 65 Print Upton Dell Vllach John Michael Common places Readings in American Vernacular Architecture referencing V Gordon Childe The Bronze Age NY Macmillan 1930 pp 206 8 Noble Allen George and M Margaret Geib Wood brick and stone the North American settlement landscape Amherst University of Massachusetts Press 1984 121 Corner Post Log Construction Description Analysis and Sources A Report to Early American Industries Association by Nancy S Shedd 10 March 1986 available online at Corner Post Log Construction Huntingdon History Research Network Archived from the original on 25 September 2013 Retrieved 10 April 2014 Saitta House Report Part 1 Archived 2008 12 16 at the Wayback Machine DykerHeightsCivicAssociation com Gotz Karl Heinz et al 1989 Timber Design amp Construction Sourcebook McGraw Hall ISBN 0 07 023851 0 Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 15 July 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link a b Charlotte Bengtsson Mechano sorptive creep of wood in tension and compression in Lars Bostrom editor 1st International RILEM Symposium on Timber Engineering Stockholm Sweden 13 14 September 1999 Volume 8 of RILEM proceedings RILEM Publications 1999 ISBN 978 2 912143 10 5 838 pages 317 327 Fire Safety PDF Canadian Wood Council Archived from the original PDF on 30 May 2008 Bailey Colin Timber Structural Material Behavior in Fire University of Manchester Archived from the original on 9 May 2008 Retrieved 4 May 2008 References EditRichard Harris Discovering Timber framed Buildings 3rd rev ed Shire Publications 1993 ISBN 0 7478 0215 7 John Vince 1994 The Timbered House Sorbus ISBN 1 874329 75 3 Further reading EditEnglish traditionRonald Brunskill 1992 1981 Traditional Buildings of England Gollancz ISBN 0 575 05299 6 A good introductory book on carpentry and joinery from 1898 in London England is titled Carpentry amp Joinery by Frederick G Webber and is a free ebook in the public domain Carpentry amp joinery or reprint ISBN 9781236011923 or ISBN 9781246034189 Timber Buildings Low energy constructions Cristina Benedetti Bolzano 2010 Bozen Bolzano University Press ISBN 978 88 6046 033 2 For an English summary of important points presented in the Dutch language book Houten kappen in Nederland 1000 1940 Wooden Roofs in the Netherlands 1000 1940 use this link Herman Janse Houten kappen in Nederland 1000 1940 dbnl External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Timber framing Wikimedia Commons has media related to Reconstruction of medieval buildings Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Half timber Work Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 12 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 836 Jackson Allen W 1912 The half timber house The country house library NY McBride Nast amp Co Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Timber framing amp oldid 1134654340, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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