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Lesson 1 in Traditional Serbian Rural Architecture

The reason I researched information about traditional rural houses (seoske kuce) in Serbia,
was a personal one: my husband and I wanted to remodel his old family house in a village in
the south of Serbia.
But for me, only if I understand the principle of the past I can apply them in a contemporary
way. And also only if I understand the regional peculiarities I can transform an old house into a
modern one that blends perfectly with the surroundings.
Basically the rural type houses have two typical images: there is the log-cabin (mostly in
Western Serbia) called "6pauapa" (brvnara, from brvno = log) and the cottage with mud-
filled walls (all over Serbia) called "6ouppyka" (bondruka). Then there are mixed forms of
these two basic types.
The way of construction and how the buildings and rooms were disposed, based on the
experience of the farmers and how the farmers household was organized. The architecture was
deducted from the form of living, and this was very close and dependable from nature,
weather and the characteristics of the area.
So the building were strictly functional and the used material was what the pheasant could find
in his surrounding:
wattle of reef, wood or straw for fillings of wooden framework and wood-shingles or tiles to
cover the roof. Then according to climatic conditions, the materials may vary.
The 6pauapa (brvnara)
This is the oldest type and also the rarest form: the log-cabin. It's a one-room rectangle
building, built directly on the ground or on a flat base of rubble stones (mostly when the
terrain is steep). The tented or hip roof (four sides) is steep and covered with wooden
shingles. The eaves come down very low and cover most part of the windows and protects
them from weather.
The typical of the log-cabin is that the walls are massive and full. The logs can be round or
squared off.
Vuk Karadzic's house in Trsic (here my post about Trsic)

An open fireplace is located in the center. Usually there are two doors on oposite sides. The
floors are of stomped earth and the ceiling is open to the roof. Windows are just small vents in
the logs, that will be closed with wood or transparent leather in winter.
These log-cabins were used for living or overnight-stay in the woods, today it's still used for
weekend-houses in the mountains.
Bonppyuna konc1pykunja ncnynena ua1HoH
(The Bondruka Wall is a wooden skeleton filled with mud)
The "6ouppyka" (bondruka)
Tis is the most popular rural house in the Balkan region and is a further progress of the log-
cabin. The construction is of wooden skeleton walls filled with mud and reef and plastered with
mud on the outside and with plaster on the interior walls.
Also here, on steep terrains the cellar is made of stones to level out the differences in height.
There is always a hiproof (4-sided roof) and it's covered with slightly curved roof tiles.
A typical Bondruka with Stone basment
and plaster-covered skeletton-walls of wood and mud

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