Friday, June 10, 2016

Casa Adobe

Adobe is the Spanish word for mud brick, a natural building material made from sand, clay, water, and some kind of fibrous or organic material (sticks, straw, and/or manure), usually shaped into bricks using molds and dried in the sun. Adobe buildings are similar to cob and rammed earth buildings, but cob and rammed earth are directly made into walls rather than bricks. These bricks were used to make pueblos in New Mexico. The Anasazi, Hopi, and Zuni peoples used this. (Source Wikipedia)
 
(Adobe house near Las Cruces, NM 1936)

Since modeling the Southwestern part of the United States I quickly realized that many of my structures needed to be build in this style.

Adobe had been in use by indigenous peoples of the Americas in the Southwestern United States, Mesoamerica, and the Andean region of South America for several thousand years. The Pueblo people built their adobe structures with handfuls or basketfuls of adobe, until the Spanish introduced them to the making of bricks. Adobe brickmaking was used in Spain starting in the eighth century B.C. The Spanish Conquistadores also left their trace all along the California Coast with numerous missions and stucco buildings. (Source Wikipedia)



The pre-production model of the Casa Adobe above represents a small 2-room house.



I tried a new method to cover the walls with tile grout to represent adobe or even stucco if used in a lighter color and painted.


To do so I painted the walls with a coat of white glue and then sifted the grout over it. Because most of the grout did not stick to the walls and there were still some bare spots, I covered the walls again and wetted them with a spray bottle. This worked out satisfactorily.


After the walls had dried completely I assembled the building.


As you can see now the tabs and slots are still visible.


I mixed a batch of grout with a little wet water and white glue and painted the edges and the inner walls on the roof.


It ended up with a different shade so I decided to dab the whole structure with the new mix.


I inserted the vigas and glued the roofs in place.


 As you can see the grout dries very mat like the real thing. I guess I could not top it with just painting and weathering the walls.

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