Rammed earth |

Thermal mass (Building) Compression Cement United States Department of Agriculture University of Utah Construction Compressed earth block Dutch brick Super Adobe Church of the Holy Cross (Stateburg, South Carolina) Borough House Plantation Stateburg, South Carolina Embodied energy Mudbrick Subsoil Soundproofing Heating Natural building Fireproofing Texas Transportation Institute Foundation (engineering) Biodegradation Topsoil Pneumatics Styrofoam South Dakota State University United States Agency for International Development Thermal insulation Lime (mineral) Building material Stucco Developing country Reinforced concrete Humidity Adobe Air conditioning Deforestation Brick Sand Clay
External Searches: |
VisWiki in different languages >>  English | 日本語 | Deutsch | Français | Polski | Italiano | Nederlands | Português | Español | Русский | Svenska | 中文 | Norsk (Bokmål) | Suomi | Català
The main article content on this page (titled: "Rammed earth") was retrieved on the fly from Wikipedia (i.e., your page access date equals the data retrieval date).
All article text on this website (VisWiki.com) derived
from Wikipedia, is licenced under the terms
of the GNU Free Documentation
License. Article images, with the exception of video thumbnails, are
entirely from Wikipedia, and their copyrights should follow accordingly. All
videos and video thumbnails shown on this site are
from YouTube. Other visual/semantic
contents are mine.
Note to former VisualWikipedia users:
The domain name VisualWikipedia.com has recently been renamed to VisWiki.com.
I'll add more useful featrures here, so please update your bookmark accordingly :)