Download - Housing typologies report
The different physical characteristics of a buildingaccording to the materials happened to be available on thatparticular place with a particular climate, cultural aspects, socialstatus, etc.
WHAT IS
?
AR 553 HOUSING
SHELTERto covers, protects or defends ourselves from
harmful elements and changes
To have a COMFORTABLE
LIVING
HOUSING
A free-standingresidential building. It
means that the
building does not
share an inside
wall with any other
house.
A Northern European single-family home in Denmark.
It consist of pairs of
houses side by side as
units. They share
a party wall.
A row of identical
houses that are
joined together. Terraced house in UK
Row houses in
Toronto
It is a one-
storey house,
usually
surrounded by a
veranda.
A typical side-gabled bungalow in
Louisville’s Deer Park Neighborhood, US.
A multi-unit
dwelling made
up of several
apartments/flats/c
ondos within a
building.
A very expensive apartment on the top floor of the building. It
occupies the entire floor.
Is a very large and
stately dwelling
house for the
wealthy.
A large caravan, that can be installed on a permanent site and that is used a residence. Also called
manufactured home.
A static caravan park on the cliffs above Beer,
Devon, England.
Consist of shops on the ground
floor w/c open up to a public in a
covered passage and
has residential accommodation
upstairs
The shop houses would adjoin
each other to form rows
with regular façade.
It is a vernacular
style building type that is commonly seen in areas
such as urban Southeast Asia.
It is a boat that has
been designed to be
used primarily as a
human
dwelling.
Houses raised on
piles over the soil or a body of water. It is still commonly found in
South East Asia,
Papua New Guinea and West Africa.
A conical tent originally made of
animal skins.
Popularized by the
American
Indians.
Also called
snowhouse, a shelter constructed from blocks of snow, generally
in the form of a dome. Predominantly constructed by people of
Canada’s Central Arctic and GreenlandsThule area.
A wooden
structure built in
the branches of a
tree.
A large building at a
College or University
where students
live.
A set of buildings
where the
monks/nuns
live.
Presented by:
April Ann O. Natulla
Cindy B. Remoreras