Koti Banal: A Case Study On An Architecture Style of Himalayan India
Koti Banal: A Case Study On An Architecture Style of Himalayan India
Koti Banal: A Case Study On An Architecture Style of Himalayan India
1. Introduction
‘Koti Banal’ architecture of Uttarakhand is a reflection of indigenous
realities and community involvement. It demonstrates a profound
knowledge of local materials and native sensibilities. It is an earthquake-
safe construction style done in timber and stone, which evolved as
early as 1000 years ago.Koti Banal architecture is much like the framed
construction of modern times. The structural design suggests that these
buildings responded well to the forces likely to act upon them during an
earthquake.
01
Koti Banal
02
Traditional Construction
2. Architecture
Placement
These buildings are typically found in flat, sloped and hilly terrain. They
do not share common walls with adjacent buildings. In most cases,
Koti Banal structures were erected separately without any buildings in
the immediate vicinity and are typically at a distance of about 2.0 - 4.0
meters from a neighboring building.
Building Configuration
Internal walls only exist in the 2-unit buildings separating the main living
area on each floor at the buildings rear side from a vestibule at the front.
The upper two floors additionally have external balconies which are
constructed with a wooden railing running around the whole building.
The balconies are supported by cantilevering wooden logs of the flooring
system.
03
Koti Banal
It is this projecting balcony which gives the house the false appearance
of being top-heavy and unstable.
For the two bottommost layers single wooden logs while for the upper
layers double wooden logs are used. The open spaces (30 cm) between
the horizontal logs are furnished with well-dressed flat stones which
are dry-packed or by using a paste of pulses (lentils) as mortar. This
wooden cribbage structure is not used for the upper parts of the wall
where the dressed stones have a load-bearing function.
04
Traditional Construction
05
Koti Banal
The walls parallel to the floor beams are supported in out-of plane action
by providing a large timber log, longer than the building dimension and
having holes at the two ends. A vertical member (shear key) having length
equal to several storey heights, is inserted into the hole which provides
support to the walls in out-of-plane direction.
06
Traditional Construction
Koti Banal structures in general have a single small entry and relatively
small openings which are surrounded by strong wooden elements to
compensate for the loss of strength and in general, no windows are
provided at ground floor level.
07
Koti Banal
Dimensions
The typical span of the flooring system in general is half of the building
width. The typical storey height in such buildings is 2.20 - 2.50 meters.
The typical structural wall density is more than 20 %. Precisely, the
structural wall density ranges between 40 and 45 %.
Materials
The timber is of very high quality, strength and resilience. In most cases,
wooden logs which were even exposed to all kinds of weathering are
intact even after several hundred years, without any special maintenance.
08
Traditional Construction
3. Structural Detail
Gravity Load Resisting System
Gravity loads from the floor construction (dead loads) or from live loads
on the roof (e.g., snow) are transferred to the massive wall system
which basically consists of a hybrid timber-reinforced stone masonry
system. In the lower parts of the walls the timber logs are interconnected
establishing a very solid cribbage while the timber elements on the upper
parts are mainly of a reinforcing purpose. The walls further transfer the
loads to a stone-filled base platform which is the continuation of the
stone foundation.
Seismic Features
The building configuration provides adequate safety against lateral
shear, but there is no apparent safety measure against overturning. These
buildings which are up to five storeys tall have survived the overturning
effects even of strong earthquakes due to two reasons:
• Good aspect ratio of the buildings.
• The use of lighter timber construction in the upper two storeys.
09
Koti Banal
10
Traditional Construction
4. Lifestyle
Each building typically has 1 housing unit. Normally one family occupies
one building. In those buildings which are vertically separated two living
units (of the same family) are present. Due to successive division of the
property, nowadays different storeys are owned by different people but
having the same family roots.
Generally the buildings have a single room on every floor with a vertically
distributed usage. While the ground floor is used for cattle or grain
storage, the upper floors are used as living and bed rooms. The kitchen
is generally on the top floor. In some buildings, dry toilets are located at
the cantilevering parts of the balcony at forth story.
11
Koti Banal
12
Traditional Construction
the unavailability and scarcity of timber. A gradual shift from the closely
spaced timber logs to increasing heights between them filled with stones
is visible in the local construction. For contemporary constructions in
the region, no such logs (ring beams) are used anymore.
Recently, many Koti Banal structures face serious adverse effects being
caused by the surrounding building development. Unplanned construction
directly taking place next to Koti Banal buildings and encroaching upon
these old structures as well as the partly demolition in order to use the
disassembled building materials for new buildings seriously affect the
dynamic behavior of these traditional structures during earthquake
shaking. In addition, these negative effects are accelerated by the
structural deterioration due to the lack of maintenance and preservation.
11