Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 16

Archaeologia Islandica - 01.01.2013, Side 16
AGUSTA EDWALD AND KAREN MILEK shield new walls, which apart from giving the appearance that the houses were sinking, lead to various structural and damp problems (Sveinsson 1790). Rapoport (1979) defined vemacular architecture as having an ‘additive quality’ in opposition to the closed, final form of high-style design (i.e. modem constmctions). Such distinctions obscure the practices that go on in making all buildings, whether designed or not, as well as those activities that follow on from the fleeting moment when a house is considered to be completed. According to Rapoport’s (1979) definition the Icelandic turfhouse is quintessentially vemacular and the eradication of ad hoc building practices were, indeed, central to the discourse of‘modemizers’ like Sveinsson. It is not the distinction between modem and vemacular that we are most concemed with here but rather to demonstrate how the entangled processes of building and inhabiting, which we believe occur in all buildings, can be illustrated through an investigation of the biography of a turfhouse. Turfhouses do not appear to have been built to a pre-designed plan but rather refurbished and amended as needs arose. This may be one of the reasons why houses on the majority of Icelandic farms appear to have been in the same place on their property through centuries of habitation (Vésteinsson 2004). Only occasionally was an old house demolished completely to make way for a new building. Most often new rooms were added to existing ones, older ones tom down or refurbished, entrances blocked or new ones created, in a continual intermixed building-and-dwelling. A turf house is built of relatively malleable, impermanent constmction materials: turf easily wears and is prone to degradation when penetrated by water and ffost (Milek 2012), causing the walls to slump and crack. However, the building material also allows for refurbishment: corridors and entrance ways can be blocked, walls shored up, thickened or cut back with relative ease. As new additions are built, and older rooms are demolished or refurbished, the complex relationship between the building and its inhabitants is clearly materialized, as the house grows with a growing family and shrinks when families get smaller or during periods of hardship. Six inspection records of the farmhouse at Hombrekka are available at the local archives in Sauðárkrókur lfom the years 1868, 1881, 1896, 1917, 1918 and 1920. The records give an overwhelming impression of the building in near constant disrepair. The descriptions are often very detailed (Table 2). They document the size of individual rooms, the style and condition and of the roof, walls and flooring, and the presence and sizes of windows and doors. However, they do not describe the layout of the farmhouse. Each room is described by itself and even though it is possible to gain some indication of where the rooms were situated in relation to one another from the order in which they were described, the exact layout of the farmhouse cannot be determined. The inspections, furthermore, do not list any fumiture or decoration in the building such as stoves, hearths, or lighting fixtures
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Archaeologia Islandica

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