Unit 3
Unit 3
Unit 3
Street view
BHUJ
INTRODUCTION
Bhuj is the main city of kutch region. It is the old walled city with narrow
and widening streets. It is been considered as one of the important place to
walk around. It is been established in 1510. It has fascinating new and old
temples around the city. It is been fully surrounded with fascinating walls,
old palaces, gateways, and winding lanes. Bhuj is been considered as the
second largest district of India.
Bhuj is been considered as the first home for the swami narayana temple by
vikram savant.
STREET VIEW OF BHUJ
The streets of Bhuj is very narrow and very compact to move. This also has
houses on both sides which prevents the sun’s rays to penetrate in the
building.
There are number of houses with projected balconies in front. It provides
mutual shading to the walls.
Most of the buildings are been built of marbles and has more details in
front of the façade.
Elevation
WORKS IN BHUJ REGION…
The major work is the wood carving and designing the figures of animals
and humans. The major work is the drift wood carving.
THE DRIFT WOOD CARVING..
Sea Mova' tree grows along the seashore. The wood of the root of this tree
also known as drift root is used for wood carving. The better pieces of the
roots is carved and shaped into beautiful shapes and also figures.
Sometimes the figures thus crafted are of the deities while at other times it
may depict animals, birds or humans. . The most interesting feature of these
sculpture / figurines is that it is made of a single piece of wood without
joints
BOHRAS
The traditional habitats of the Islamic community of the Bohras (generally
referred to Daudi Bohras) in Gujarat, found in cities and towns such as
Surat, Siddhpur, Dahod, Godhra, Kapadvanj, Khambhat, Ahmedabad,
Palanpur, Bhavnagar, Dholka, Surendranagar, Morbi and Jamnagar, etc.
are excellent examples of traditional architecture rooted in the regional
landscape.
This study attempts to understand the interrelationship between the living
traditions of Bohra house form and its culture.
There are two broad categories of Bohrwads: one has an organic layout
while the other is strictly geometrically laid out.
The structure of a typical organic Bohrwad is inwardly oriented, where the
houses are arranged in an introverted neighborhood form.
Most Bohrwads have a formal entrance where gates used to be closed at
night in the past.
The houses in a Bohrwad are typically grouped around a street and these
form a mohalla; several mohallas form a Bohrwad.
Each mohalla is an exogamous unit and may have fifty to a hundred
houses.
These neighborhoods have a structural unity and give a general impression
of relative orderliness and homogeneity.
It has a well-knit and dense urban character. Besides the houses, a large
Bohrwad generally contains a mosque, a Madressa, a Jamat Khana, and
other buildings for collective functions.
In the Bohrwads, the neighborhood mosque is the most important
institution as the central public space for religious rituals.
The Bohrwad streets stand apart because of a sense of order, extreme
cleanliness, well-designed drainage system and the element of visual
surprise
The closely packed houses, site constraints and absence of standardized
building controls result in an organic growth and a relatively irregular
street pattern.
Male dominance is strong and women are commonly segregated from men
not belonging to their immediate families.
Gender is important as an organizing theme in dwelling layouts and use of
spaces.
For the Bohras, religion is a way of life that also provides a civic code,
influencing social behavior and interactions.
The Bohra house is usually always oriented according to the cardinal
directions as per the practice in the region.
The urban house has at its core a set of spaces, which in their sequence and
proportions are identical to those of the rural dwelling.
It is basically a deep house-plan with three (or four) sequential rooms one
behind the other.
The regional model was not only adapted by the Bohra community but also
taken to its maximum potential with necessary adjustments due to the
religious tenets of Islam.
Certain concepts like clear separation between the public and private, the
necessity for an in-between zone at the entrance level, the male/female
divide, seclusion of women, the intense need for privacy, etc. have brought
about specific devices and spatial configurations that reflect the tenets of
the religion.
BUILDING MATERIALS
The main building material used for walls is light yellow coloured sand
stone.
Roofs are built of mud, supported on wooden beams covered with grass
mat. In more recent construction, stone beams have been used as roof
supports.
The thickness of the roof varies from 45cms. To 90 cms., enough to
dampen the effect of the diurnal temperature variations.
There is no scientific study to compare the performance of the two kinds of
roofing (i.e. Stone slabs and wooden beams), but according to popular
belief the wooden ceilings with grass mats stay cooler than stone ceilings.
The wall surfaces are highly articulated with projecting balconies, sun
shades and brackets, and each of these building elements is in turn
intricately carved.
Flat portions of stone walls are also decorated with deep carvings. The
resulting overall building surface is designed to stay cool even when it is
exposed to the sun.
An uneven building form can also influence radiative heat loss from the
building to the sky.
This assumption is not justifiable in all situations and the increased wall
area of an uneven building mass radiates a greater amount of heat to the
sky and consequently it stays cooler than a more compact mass. Thus it is to
be expected that the uneven built form of jaisalmer with large wall areas
helps in keeping the building cool
TEXTURE
An interesting feature of jaisalmer is the use of texture. This happens at
three different levels of organization.
At the town scale the buildings are of unequal heights with wind pavilions
and high parapet walls creating an uneven skyline and shading each other
in the process.
At the second level, the building facades have a large number of projections
Ventilation
At higher temperatures, human thermal comfort can be provided only by
ensuring air movement in the built space. Natural air movement through a
building is caused either by Wind or by temperature differences between
interior and exterior. When buildings are tightly clustered together, it is
generally difficult to let winds into the house and air
Before outside air passes through a living space, its temperature must be
reduced, or else its cooling effect on the human skin is nullified by
convective heat gain due to its high temperature.
During summer when there are strong surface winds, sand gets blown
along the ground and can enter buildings unless precautions are taken
against this nuisance. There are also regional dust storms where sand and
dust can get into buildings.
Successful ventilation design calls for ensuring adequate air movement
through the building and pre-treating the air to lower its temperature and
to reduce its dust particle content.
In some recently constructed houses wind scoops and suitably located air
ducts are also used to channel wind into the building
While there is little that can be done to eliminate dust due to regional dust
storms, the problem of wind-blown sand is effectively settled by the 5 to 6
metre high wall around the town. Within the town most surfaces are
paved, reducing the chance of dust being raised.
Selective ventilation (i.e. Ventilation only during the cooler periods of the
day) can help in structural cooling of a massive building, leading to lower
indoor temperatures during the day.
Surprisingly enough selective ventilation is not practised in jaisalmer and
ventilation apertures are kept open throughout the day. This is
understandable, as people are concerned with thermal comfort and not
temperature. At temperatures less than 35°c a slow current of air will
always provide better comfort than a slightly lower temperature with no
air movement (givoni, 1967). In the absence of mechanical ventilation
devices, even warmer outdoor air is welcome.
in winter - need for air movement, window - opened during the day and
kept shut at night.
VERTICAL SHAFTS
In jaisalmer buildings, a number of interconnected vertical shafts are used
for ventilation. The courtyard effect is well known and used in almost all
hot-dry climates.
In addition to the simple courtyards, very narrow vertical ducts and
staircase shafts are used to deflect wind down into the house in jaisalmer .
Coupled with the high thermal inertia of the massive stone walls, such
shafts temper air before it enters the living space in much the same way as
happens in the iranian wind towers.
Water is a precious commodity in jaisalmer, and since all the water for
domestic use had to be carried to the house from the garhisar tank outside
the town by womenfolk, the common people never used any form of
evaporative space cooling. But there are a few places, in the palace and in
one patua haveli, where fountains and cascades have been installed. From
the small size of cisterns feeding these fountains it is clear that their use
must have been limited to some special occasions.
Air-shafts
UNIDIRECTIONAL WIND SCOOP
Wind scoop
The natural cooling systems used at jaisalmer include:
Dense clustering of buildings.
Sun control through orientation and structural projections.
Cooling of sunlit surfaces by use of fins.
Massive construction for roofs and walls.
Courtyards and other air ducts for ventilation.
the third haveli belongs to nathmal, a later day prime minister who gifted it
to the rawal and was allowed to retain it. Built by two brothers in 1885,
this haveli has two identical looking portions, which are in fact two
different parts united by a common facade.
Look for the projected balconies, which seem to emerge from books of
poetry. So ethereal and charming, the carving never looked better. A
perfect example of jeweller's art applied to stone carving.
The muslim silavats (artisans) did a wonderful job here and left a
marvellous legacy of craftsmanship excellent in detail and flawless in
conception. If only for viewing these havelis a trip to jaisalmer is more than
amply rewarded.