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Dick Osseman | all galleries >> Ankara pictures >> Hacı Bayram Camii (mosque) > Ankara 09062012_0260.jpg
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09-Jun-2012 Dick Osseman

Ankara 09062012_0260.jpg

Restoration activity is hectic around the mosque, and spreading downhill. I hope the area will keep an "old feel". Sometimes the result of restoration in Turkey looks a bit plastic, too clean. I suppose I'll keep returning and see the district develop.

The building technique used in most 19th and early 20th century Ankara houses is called ‘half-timbered’.

Traditional timber framing is the method of creating structures using heavy squared-off and carefully fitted and joined timbers with joints secured by large wooden pegs (larger versions of the mortise and tenon joints in furniture). The method comes from making things out of logs and tree trunks without modern high tech saws to cut lumber from the starting material stock. Using axes, adzes and draw knives, hand powered auger drill bits (bit and brace), and laborious woodworking, artisans or farmers could gradually assemble a building capable of bearing heavy weight without excessive use of interior space given over to vertical support posts. This building method has been used for at least two thousand years in many parts of the world. As it is often the case, this house has a brick foundation.

In the half-timbered houses of central Anatolia, the panels between the timbers are filled-in with non-structural material that is known as infill: generally stones or bricks (as was done here). Then the half-timbered walls are covered by siding materials such as plaster or (cheaper) loam.

Correspondent: J.M.Criel, Antwerpen.
Sources: ‘Anadolu Mirasında Türk Evleri’ (T.C. Kültür Bakanlığı) 1995 & Wikipedia.

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