Samal House in Book
Samal House in Book
Samal House in Book
• Traditional Samal houses are Secondary posts along the perimeter of the
elevated rectangular one-room wall used as vertical support for the exterior
structures near the coastal waters of thatch wall.
Southern Mindanao, Palawan, • taytayan-tikus, roof beam
Zamboanga, and Sulu
archipelago. The lumber or bamboo laid horizontally
• These houses are directly built on throughout the perimeter of the wall to hold
shallow water and connected to the the upper-end portion of the posts.
shore by a pantan (bridge) or
• salsal, joist
directly built on solid ground.
• The houses are clustered in groups A whole bamboo laid horizontally at about
by kinship, with 100 to 500 0.40-0.60 meter spacing to support the
members per group, and affiliated flooring of the house.
with the nearest mosque.
• Coastal house has ample space TAUSUG HOUSEIN THE BOOK
underneath the house for the
bay sinug, house
family's pelang (boat) and fishing
paraphernalia. • The traditional house of the Tausug
in the Southern Philippines. It is
SAMAL HOUSE PARTS
comprised of two or more houses
• bubung, roof on stilts that are connected by an
elevated open space serving as
The gable roof with moderate slope usually house extensions.
made of nipa thatch material on bamboo or • Tausug or "suluk" is the foremost
wood purlins. The roof also has an ethnic group in Sulu then followed by
extended roof for the open deck and built the Badjao (Bajau, Bajao, Badyaw,
just below the end of the main gable roof. SamaI or Sama), the Yakan, the
• pang-tuud, king post Kagayan, the lranun (llanun) and the
Kalibugan (Subanun or Suba' anun).
The central timber post that extends beyond • The word Tausug is said to come-
the perimeter wall to support the gable-end from-the words "tau" (meaning
wall and the ridge of the roof people) and "sug" (meaning tide),
hence they are the "people of the
• habong, tie beam
tide."
A rectangular lumber or bamboo laid across • The two distinct communities of the
the upper section of the room to connect the Tausug is the "tau gimba" (inland
two king posts. people) and the "tau higad" (people
along the shore).
• hanglad, girder
A thick lumber or bamboo which holds the
floor joists of the house.
TAUSUG HOUSE PARTS • tadjuk pasung, bargeboard-end
decoration
• lubing-lubing, rafter
The decoration at the upper-end of the
A rectangular lumber providing support on
bargeboard which covers the projecting end
the ridge beam at its upper end and the
of the gable. The decoration is usually in the
purlins throughout its length.
form of a sea-serpent (naga) or a bird
• tiyadtad, split bamboo wall (manuk-manuk).
• sagang, railing
PANAY HOUSE BAHAY KUBO A waist-level railing, made using bamboo,
bahay kubo, cube-shaped house used as an enclosed and protected porch
area.
• A common type of dwelling in
lowland and coastal areas during the • hagdan, stair
Pre-Hispanic Philippines. "Bahay" is The main access to the house with the
a Tagalog word for house while entire framework made from bamboo or
"kubo" is from the Spanish "cubo”, combined with wood.
meaning cube.
• Bahay kubo is a one-room house, • Balangkas, framework
raised above the ground to protect
The skeletal structural element of a roof or
the dwellers from the dampness and
wall, assembled or fitted together to handle
humidity of the earth.
the exterior elements or finishes.
• The bahay kubo has three distinct
horizontal divisions, namely: the • batalan, washing area
stilts or posts, the one-room upper
living unit, and the steep roof. A small space adjacent to the cooking area
The posts are often covered or with a service door leading outside. It is
enclosed with bamboo latticework used for washing hands and feet, bathing
to serve as usable space kids and washing pots and dishes
underneath the house for house • abuhan, cooking area
implements and livestock
• The bahay kubo is often built with An elevated earthen fireplace with a stone
whole bamboo or tree branches stove for cooking and layers of open
as structural framework, and finished shelves for drying firewood and smoking
with bamboo strips for floors, palm fish.
leaves for roof, and bamboo strips or
palm leaves for walls.
• bulwagan, main house • haligi, post
The main section of the house used as A whole bamboo, vertically set up to support
living, dining, and sleeping areas. the floor and roof members. A post buried
on the ground is called binaon (buried) and
• silong, underneath the house a post set up above a stone slab is referred
An enclosed/open space under the house to as pinatong (placed on)
where harvests are stored, tools and
• patukuran, secondary beam
implement are kept, and livestock (chicken,
pigs, goats) are tended. A whole bamboo laid over the main beam
(yawi) to carry the floor joist (soleras).
• bubong, roof
• soleras, floor joist
The steep thatch roof made from either
bamboo cogon grass, anahaw leaves or A whole bamboo laid parallel with each
nipa shingles as protection and shade from other of about 12 to 15 inches over the
the sun and torrential rains. secondary beam (patukuran) as support for
the flooring.
• nipa
• gililan, floor sill
"Nypa fruiticans," a tropical palm with a
short trunk and broad pinnate leaves that A whole bamboo laid around the perimeter
grows abundantly along rivers and of the house used to hold and support the
estuaries; its leaves are utilized both as walls.
roofing and walling materials.
BONTOC HOUSE IN BOOK
• sahig, flooring
afung, house
Bamboo strips laid perpendicular to the floor
joists, either closely laid or with ample • The traditional type of house in
spaces, allowing natural air to enter through Bontoc, Mountain Province
the floor. comprised of perimeter wooden
walls enclosed in an open living
• dingding, wall space, and central granaries. It is
Finished walls assembled on the ground covered by a steep, thick roof that is
and tightly secured using rattan strips on the almost covering the perimeter wall.
bamboo wall studs. The wall siding is either • Afung is the Bontoc house for
bamboo latticework (sala-sala), interlaced married couples and children up to
bamboo (amakan), woven bamboo (sawali), eight years old.
or woven coconut leaves (sulirap). • Afung is one of the houses in the
Cordillera that is built directly on the
• yawi, main beam ground and its ground space serving
as the main living and working
A whole bamboo, horizontally laid to define
areas.
the perimeter of the house and tied firmly on
each post with rattan strips.
• babarey, village • falig, granary
The settlement area in a Bontoc community. An elevated one-room structure supported
by four hand-hewn wooden posts and
The village usually consists of ator (men's
enclosed by wooden plank walls. It is used
meeting place), afong (houses), pabafunan as space for storing rice grain
(boy's dormitory), pangis (girl's dormitory),
chap-ay(open space with flat stone in • soklut, cooking area
circular layout), and akhamang (rice
granary). The area, at the left corner of the house, is
intended for cooking and as fireplace for the
adjoining sleeping area.
• The steep roof, made from cogon • tap-an, pounding area
grass that grows abundantly near
the village, extends beyond the walls The section of the house with stone
and much lower than a standing pavement and a pounding hole where the
Bondoc man. task of pounding rice is done.
• The roof and the granary are both • ang-an, sleeping area
supported by independent wooden
posts and function distinctively: the The area utilized for sleeping with a tag
covered roof space as the main (reed mat) as bed for the couple and
house, and the elevated central children up to eight years old.
granary for storing rice grains.
• atep, roof
BONTOC HOUSE PARTS
A steep, thick cogon roof protecting the
• li-im, eating area central granary and the living space below
the granary
The most spacious in the house since it
contains only an elevated stick rack (patyay) • oway, roof undersheating
suspended on the wall, and the water jar
Closely- knit reeds, parallel to the ridge
(panannom) in one corner.
beam, as brace for the cogon grass roof
Stored in patyay are the following:
• tokod, post
khyag (rattan plates)
A heavy square or circular member as
palato (enamel plates) support for both granary and roof structure
A wooden ladder, made from branches of A single-room house of light materials that
trees, intended for accessing the central are either integrally built on high trees or
granary. above a tree stump serving as the house's
main support.
• chingching, wallboard
Tree Dwellers in the Philippines:
Hand-hewn wooden planks, laid horizontally
above every panel, used to serve as the - Gad dang and Kalinga of Luzon
primary wall protection of the ground living - Manobos and Mandaya of Mindanao
space.
- Moros of Lake Lanao
• balangay, boathouse
- Negritos of Bukidnon and North central
An impressive boat, approximately 25 Mindanao
meters in length and carbon-dated to 320
AD, that was built entirely of wood and used - Bagobo of Davao
for seafaring by the ancient Kingdom of - Mandaya
Butuan.
- Bilaan
• Pinanahang, Lean-to
- llongot
A form of dwelling common to the Negritos,
an ethnic group regarded as wanderers,
hunters, and farmers practicing slash and
burn agriculture even during the Hispanic
period. The lean-to is a single-pitched
structure of grass or thatch on wood
branches framing with the lower end resting
on the ground and the upper end supported
by wood posts.
• Lungib/Kweba, Cave
A natural chamber on the side of a hill
utilized as one of the earliest forms of
dwelling. The Tabon Cave in southwest of
Palawan is one of the oldest and largest
caves with an approximate length of 41.00
meters and an opening of 8.00 meters in
height and 16.00 min width.
Tree House
HOUSE, EARLY FORM
balangay, boathouse
BAHAY NA BATO OR FILIPINO • tehado, tejado, tiled roof
HOUSE IN BOOK A roof finished with curved or flat pieces of
burnt-clay tiles.
Filipino House
• balustre, balaustre, baluster
• The hybrid type of house first built in
lntramuros, Manila in the 17th One of the upright and short vertical woods
century before spreading throughout or clay members serving as railing of stair,
the country combining European open deck, and bintanilya (small window).
classical elements, architectural
elements of the traditional Chinese • bintanang capis, ventana capiz,
houses, and architecture and capiz window
climate-responsive elements of the A wooden-framed checkerboard design
traditional lowland houses or bahay window, often sliding in operation, with 1 a
kubo. Unique with the house is the pane of capiz shell that provides a non-glary
use of bintanang capis (capis and, diffuse light to the interior.
window) and extensive use of
sustainable elements such as
double facade, wide eaves and • capis, capiz, capiz pane
awnings, louvers, floor-to-ceiling
One of the small squares, translucent
operable walls and partitions to
shells, used as windowpane in a capiz
maximize natural daylight and
window, from the clam "placuna placenta."
ventilation, cross and stack
ventilation systems, and open • concheria
courtyard as sun and wind catchers.
• This house is also called the Filipino In a capiz window, an assembly of capiz
ancestral house, bahay na bato, or panes fixed by a wooden frame.
bahay na kahoy. Its architecture is • concha
different from the Antillian houses in
Netherlands, or even the traditional In a capiz window, a piece of capiz pane
houses in Mexico, Mediterranean, or fixed by a wooden frame.
Spain that was built during the same
• mirador, mirador, mirador
period when the Filipino house was
designed. A viewing space on a tower like structure
built above the main house or at an azotea
BAHAY NA BATO HOUSE PARTS
and surrounded by windows or decorative
• teha, teja, roof tile latticework.
One of the thin roofing tiles covering the • kaida, caida, antesala
roof made from burnt-clay and is
A transition space right after the stair,
approximately semicylindrical and tapering
in shape. leading to sala (living) or to komedor
(dining). Kaida is from the Spanish verb
• teja canalada -semicylindrical "caer" (to fall) and is said to be a place
roofing tile where ladies let their trains fall.
• teja plana - flat roofing tile
• kuwarto, cuarto, bedroom • dispensa, dispensa, pantry
A room usually adjacent to the sala (living A service room adjacent to a kusina
room) with kama (bed), tokador (dresser), (kitchen) and komedor (dining) for storing
aparador (cabinet) and mesa (table). food supplies and other provisions.
• The interior of a Filipino House, The lower end of the roof projecting beyond
particularly the view of the sala the wall board often with a decorative
(living room) and kaida (antesala). pierced work of wood board or metal sheet.