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Introduction
The adobe homes and churches of the Río
Grande region of New Mexico stand as testimony to
a tradition of communal building, self-sufficiency
and the use of locally available materials.
Aesthetically and technically, these buildings are strongly based
on Spanish and Mexican precedents.
The historic Ranchos de Taos church showing a blending of
Native American and Hispanic influences and the technologies used in its construction and repair.
La historica iglesia de Ranchos de Taos que incorpora elementos de construccion y de reparo hispanos e indigenas.
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When the Spanish arrived in the Southwest in
the late 16th century they encountered the Pueblo Indian people living in compact earthen and
stone villages which they called pueblos, or towns.
Although the layout of the pueblos differed from that
of Spanish villas, the inhabitants of both the
semi-arid regions of the Mediterranean and of New
Mexico each had arrived at a common use of earth as
the material to provide shelter from the forces of
nature as well as to protect against enemies. Indeed, the
use of adobe is common to many other parts of the
world that share similar climate and topography,
including Africa, India, China and South and Central
America. Today, nearly half of the world's population lives
in adobe or other earthen dwellings. Due to
adobe's accessibility, it is the only affordable building
material for most of the world's population. In
New Mexico, as elsewhere, adobe is made from a
mixture of clay, sand, water and straw.
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Pueblo Building Styles
For centuries, Pueblo people had built their
multi-storied communities from locally available
tuff, ledgestone, or puddled, coursed or
hand-molded adobe. Usually they built directly on the
earth, foregoing the use of foundations, and often
built several stories high, each level retreating back
from the previous in a step formation. This
configuration enabled rooftops to become places where
people carried out domestic activities, such as
pottery-making or drying crops from harvests.
Because many activities were carried on outside,
the rooms of a pueblo were principally used for
the storage of foodstuffs or as retreats from poor weather; thus they tended to be rather small in size. Exceptions to this are the kivas, circular
underground chambers similar to the pit houses from
a prior building era. At times quite large, their
roofs were held up by vertical standing logs and
spanned by beams which were covered by horizontal
poles covered with grass and layers of earth.
Spanish Building Styles
The Spanish, on the other hand, had inherited
their adobe building techniques from the Moors and
Arabs of North Africa and the Middle East. Central to
this building tradition were wooden molds to
produce uniformly shaped bricks that dried quickly
and allowed the construction of walls of greater
thickness than those made by the Pueblos. Pueblo walls
were typically about ten inches thick while those of
a Spanish home might be twice as much. Church
walls frequently attained the width of about six feet at
the base and tapered off as they rose to a height of
about forty feet.
Other contributions to Southwest adobe
architecture by Spanish settlers include
fogones, or corner fireplaces, equipped with flues which directed the
smoke out of a room (these replaced the open smoke
holes of traditional Pueblo dwellings), and corbels
which supported massive roof beams that could span
larger spaces.
Additional structures introduced by the Spanish included a
dispensa, or pantry, where foodstuffs were stored; dome-shaped
hornos, or beehive ovens, where harvests were baked before drying; and the
torreon, or circular defense tower.
The early homes of the Hispanic people were
usually built in contiguous rooms around a central
protective plaza. The Plaza del Cerro in Chimayó is
one such surviving example. These homes generally consisted of just a few rooms: a kitchen, one or two bedrooms and a sala or receiving room. In
some cases, an oratorio, or family chapel was attached
to the family home. Nichos, or carved spaces for
placing revered objects such as santos, or images of
saints carved from wood and painted, were also common.
A house under construction showing the placement of the vigas, or roof support beams.
Una casa bajo construcción que muestra el colocamiento de las vigas de pino que sostienen el techo
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Later, as defense became less of a concern, many
of the houses were made to stand independently of others and took on an I, L or U shape. Only a few homes, particularly those of the wealthy,
conformed to a central patio design which insured a
family's privacy. The Martínez Hacienda in Taos, the
Palace of the Governors and the Casa Sena in Santa Fe
are prime examples of this kind of construction.
Common to both Pueblo Indian and Hispanic traditions was the use of
viga, or timber beam laid horizontally to support the roofs. Narrow cross
poles of aspen (latillas) or split cedar branches
(rajas) were laid on top of these in a herringbone
pattern.
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The latillas in turn supported a thick layer of
mud and another of dry earth meant to protect the building from rain and snow. This method of
roof construction, however, was not waterproof and
roofs frequently leaked. Another disadvantage of
this method of roofing was the rotting of the
latillas caused by their contact with the earth. If not
replaced periodically, the roofs tended to rot and
cave in.
Because adobe will erode from the effects of
the weather, these earthen structures require
continual upkeep. Customarily, the repairing and
replastering was done in the spring or summer, particularly
by women. Family, neighbors or even an entire
community might gather to make the necessary repairs
on any given building. Cared for, an adobe
structure could last for hundreds of years, as, in fact,
they have.
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