©Bernd Bieder/imageBROKER/Superstock
Madagascar's diverse geography has given rise to a range of different architectural styles, including these village houses in the central highlands.
©Photononstop/Superstock
This royal building in Nyanza, Rwanda was created using techniques similar to those used by the region's basket weavers.
© Dr Sandra Piesik
Though they date back more 7,000 years, Arab construction techniques using date palms are still in use in today.
©Laura Rival
An Amazonian roof woven from palm and secured by vines in Ecuador.
©SvetlanaSF/Shutterstock.com
The wood-and-stone fronts of this colonial-era buildings in Malacca, Malaysia express the region's diverse cultural influences.
©age fotostock/Superstock
Overhanging roofs in the village of the Wenohian, Ghana, are made from local materials.
Justin Coupertino Umbu, January 2014
Traditional houses on the Indonesian island of Sumba in eastern Indonesia. This photo was taken before the thatch is added to the exterior, offering a look at the building's bamboo structure.
©Robert Harding/superstock
Local materials -- such as those used in the Juna Mahal Palace in Rajasthan -- can reflect a culture's identity and traditions.
©Photononstop/superstock
Traditional "beehive" Zulu homes are made from varieties of dried grass. The materials shrink in the summer, creating small gaps and allowing cooling air to pass through the structure.
Zengzong Ma
Carved into the hillside, cave houses in rural China are designed to remain cool in the summer.
Yuanhang Luo
Circular tulou buildings are designed to offer protection from the monsoon rains of southern China.
Professor Don Choi
Japan's minka houses feature steep thatched roofs and projecting eaves. Found throughout the country, the exact style of minka buildings depends on the local climate and the status of their owner.
Courtesy Professor Don Choi
Roof joints of minka houses are constructing using dense arrangements of natural chords made from materials like vine, straw and bark.
Photography Fernando Guerra -- FG+SG
In a modern example of vernacular architecture, architect Driss Kettani found ways to incorporate the ancient architectural traditions of Morocco into his designs for the Technology School of Guelmim. Large north-facing windows (and small south-facing ones) reduce the amount of direct sunlight entering the school, while ensuring that classrooms get enough natural light.
Darren Carter, Morgan Sindall
The Enterprise Centre, a campus building at the University of East Anglia, was designed using a variety of materials sourced and tested fewer than 50 kilometers (31 miles) from the site.
© Li Brian Zhang
Found in China's Qinghai province,the Jianamani Visitor Center uses a type of rock used to make Mani stones -- sacred items in Tibetan Buddhism.
Thames & Hudson
"Habitat: Vernacular Architecture for a Changing Planet" by Sandra Piesik, published by Thames & Hudson, is out now.


Featuring dozens of case studies from five climate zones, "Habitat: Vernacular Architecture for a Changing Planet" aims to highlight lessons that can be learned from traditional forms of architecture.
CNN  — 

Long before foam insulation and concrete tower blocks, humans were finding ingenious ways to address their needs through architecture. Using local materials and inherited construction techniques, societies have ensured that buildings provide protection and comfort.

In Tonga, traditional curved roofs offered aerodynamic protection against storms and cyclones. In the Uros islands of Lake Titicaca in the Andes, reeds were used in houses due to the insulating properties of their hollow stems. And in southern Taiwan, the alleyways of traditional settlements were built on an east-west axis to harness the cooling power of the island’s prevailing winds.

But in recent decades, technology has disrupted millennia-old building traditions. From steel skyscrapers in the Gulf to concrete apartment blocks in China, a global push to urbanize, modernize and, arguably, Westernize has created new architectural ideals.

Conservationists believe that the global reliance on imported materials and unsustainable construction techniques could pose long-term problems for the environment. Alternatively, so-called “vernacular” architecture – buildings designed in direct response to the local climate, materials, geology and traditions – is often energy-efficient and protective of surrounding eco-systems.

©age fotostock/Superstock
Overhanging roofs in the village of the Wenohian, Ghana, are made from local materials.

With this in mind, architects and urban planners are increasingly looking to the past, according to Sandra Piesik, editor of the new book “Habitat: Vernacular Architecture for a Changing Planet.” Featuring dozens of case studies from different climate zones, the book aims to highlight lessons that can be learned from traditional forms of architecture.

“There’s a real drive towards more sustainable construction and ways of living,” Piesik said in a phone interview. “But this is not only a movement by architects, but by governments themselves. With the (escalating) focus on sustainable resources and development goals, there’s a whole climate change debate that will only grow.”

Redefining modernity

The construction sector is resource-heavy and has a profound impact on natural environments. Heavy machinery and the transportation of imported materials are just two of the factors contributing to the industry’s huge carbon footprint. Even when construction is complete, unsustainable designs continue to devour resources. According to the United Nations, buildings are responsible for 40% of the world’s energy consumption and approximately one-third of greenhouse gas emissions.

Yuanhang Luo
Circular tulou buildings are designed to offer protection from the monsoon rains of southern China.

Importing contemporary architecture – often with little regard for local conditions – may give the impression of progress, but its presents a host of new problems too. Speaking about glass skyscrapers, David Nicholson-Cole, a professor of architecture at the University of Nottingham, wrote for The Conversation: “These behemoths are notoriously inefficient … glass exteriors trap the sun’s rays during summer and haemorrhage heat throughout the winter, requiring year-round air conditioning and climate control.”

But the appeal of such buildings is not necessarily a reflection of better engineering or more suitable materials. It is, Piesek says, a matter of culture.

“A major issue is the question, ‘What is modern today?’” she said. “This is about aspiration and stylistic change. Young people living in desert communities are using mobile phones and seeing very different ways of living.

©Laura Rival
An Amazonian roof woven from palm and secured by vines.

“The challenge for architects is to work out how we meet these social aspirations. It’s a generational thing – young people don’t want to live in the same (type of house) that their grandpa is living in.”

No architect is proposing a return to pre-modern living. But some are challenging the idea that traditional architecture is antithetical to progress, combining local practices with the latest technology, engineering and aesthetics – something Danish architect Bjarke Ingels has dubbed “vernacular 2.0.”

Looking closer to home

Local materials are at the heart of vernacular architecture. In Norway, turf is used as a roof covering due to its thermal properties, while many rural Japanese homes are still made from the wood of nearby forests.

Even if local materials are not suitable, local traditions may be, as architect Driss Kettani demonstrated with the Technology School of Guelmim in Morocco. Due to tight restrictions on public buildings, Kettani says he had little choice but to opt for earthquake-resistant concrete. However, he and fellow architects Saad El Kabbaj and Mohamed Amine Siana found other ways to incorporate the architectural traditions of the region.

Photography Fernando Guerra -- FG+SG
Technology School of Guelmim, Morocco. The starting point for the project was to provide a strong architectural form that was contemporary but was also inspired by the context in which it occurs.

“We wanted to retrieve a sense of heritage, but in a modern way,” he said in a phone interview. “We tried to use the same (energy-efficient) solutions found in the small earthen towns in the south of Morocco – to do with ventilation, the circulation of air and the control of light.”

Large north-facing windows (and small south-facing ones) reduce the amount of direct sunlight entering the school, while ensuring that classrooms get enough natural light. And the arrangement of the school buildings maximizes the flow of air through the complex, creating a natural cooling system.

These – and other – vernacular innovations meant that there was no need to install air conditioning at the school, despite the hot North African climate. For Kettani, it was just a matter of common sense.

“We don’t need to say that we’re doing vernacular architecture. It’s more simple than that,” he said. “When you’re building in a specific climate in a place with strong heritage, you can just walk in the street and see the answers. It’s just logic.”

©Bernd Bieder/imageBROKER/Superstock
Madagascar's diverse geography has given rise to a range of different architectural styles, including these village houses in the central highlands.

And there are signs that this logic is being more widely embraced internationally. In the UK, for instance, a government initiative is aiming to reduce the construction industry’s greenhouse gas emissions by 50% by 2025 – a strategy that explicitly targets the reduction of imported building materials. And if Kettani’s school were to be designed again today, Morocco’s revised regulations would permit the use of soil-based materials instead of concrete, the architect says.

Whether a change in attitudes results from government action or emerging market forces, developers will only embrace sustainable building methods if it pays off, Piesik argues.

“This has to work economically,” she said. “Whether it’s the production of new materials, supply chains or small business enterprises – or whether this is a development on a larger scale – there has to be some economic viability behind it, beyond just being a good idea. A more holistic concept needs to emerge for the future.”

“Habitat: Vernacular Architecture for a Changing Planet” by Sandra Piesik, published by Thames & Hudson, is out now.