rammed-earth construction - translation to russian
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rammed-earth construction - translation to russian

TECHNIQUE FOR CONSTRUCTING FOUNDATIONS, FLOORS, AND WALLS BY COMPACTING A DAMP MIXTURE OF SUB SOIL
Rammed-earth construction; Rammed Earth; Pisé; Pisé de terre; Compressed earth; Ram-dirt; Ram dirt; Ramdirt; Ram-earth; Rammed dirt; Ram earth; Taipa (building material); Pise de terre; Taipa (Building Material); Taipa (Portuguese Building Material); Hangtu; Tamped earth; Rammed earth building; Pounded earth; Pound dirt; Pise technique; Stamped earth; Stamped-earth foundations; Stamped-earth foundation
  • "Pisé" houses of rammed earth in [[Tabant]], [[Morocco]]; the technique is called "''tabut''" there.
  • Edifices of the [[Borough House Plantation]], [[Stateburg, South Carolina]], erected in the 1820s.
  • Rammed-earth edifice on a farm in [[France]]
  • Hmong]] house-building technique in the subtropical climate of [[Vietnam]].
  • A ''hangtu'' section of the [[Great Wall of China]]
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  • [[Nk'Mip Desert Cultural Centre]] in [[Osoyoos]], [[British Columbia]], Canada, completed in 2006
  • A wall surface with oxide colour for visual appeal
  • Rammed-earth walls form part of the entrance edifice of the [[Eden Project]] in [[Cornwall]], [[England]], UK
  • Detail of the surface of an eroded rammed-earth wall: apart from the patches of damage, the surface shows regular horizontal lines caused by the wooden [[formwork]] and subtler horizontal strata from successive courses.
  • Contemporary slip formwork in use
  • Holy Cross Episcopal Church]] in [[Stateburg, South Carolina]], erected between 1850 and 1852
  • Province of Gansu]], [[China]], at the eastern end of the [[Silk Road]].
  • Traditional model of construction of a wall of rammed earth on a foundation
  • Surface of a newly built rammed earth wall just after the removal of formwork

rammed-earth construction         

строительное дело

сооружение из уплотнённого связного грунта

rammed-earth construction         
сооружение из уплотнённого связного грунта
earth structure         
  • Old school built of rammed earth in 1836–37 in [[Bonbaden]], [[Hesse]], [[Germany]]
  • Ziggurat at [[Ali Air Base]] in [[Iraq]]
  • [[Compressed earth block]] housing being built in [[Midland, Texas]] in 2006
  • Cob wall in [[Harwell, Oxfordshire]], England, hundreds of years old, thatched to protect it from water
  • English bond bricks from 1454 at the Old College in [[Tattershall]], [[Lincolnshire]], England
  • Earthen hut with thatched roof in [[Toteil]], near [[Kassala]], [[Sudan]]
  • Turf houses]] in [[Keldur]], [[Iceland]], an example of [[Earth sheltering]]
  • Adobe bricks near a construction site in [[Milyanfan]], [[Kyrgyzstan]]
  • Traditional round mud and thatch houses forming a family compound near [[Tamale, Ghana]]
  • Ceará State]], [[Brazil]]
  • Mud houses in [[Kandahar]], [[Afghanistan]]
  • [[Omer Madison Kem]], (later, Representative to the United States Congress) in front of his sod house in [[Nebraska]] (1886)
  • Retaining wall near [[Todmorden]], [[West Yorkshire]], England
  • Maasai]] village on the A109 road, [[Kenya]]
  • [[Tianluokeng Tulou cluster]] in [[Fujian]] province, China
  • Sod bricks in a house wall
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  • Soldiers in a trench on [[Gallipoli]] during World War I
  • Making mudbricks near [[Cooktown, Australia]]
BUILDING OR OTHER STRUCTURE MADE LARGELY FROM SOIL
Earth building; Earth architecture; Earth Architecture; Earth construction; Dhajji; Earthen architecture; Mud wall
земляное сооружение

Definition

scorched earth
A scorched earth policy is the deliberate burning, destruction, and removal by an army of everything that would be useful to an enemy coming into the area.
He employed a scorched-earth policy, destroying villages and burning crops.
N-UNCOUNT: usu N n

Wikipedia

Rammed earth

Rammed earth is a technique for constructing foundations, floors, and walls using compacted natural raw materials such as earth, chalk, lime, or gravel. It is an ancient method that has been revived recently as a sustainable building method.

Under its French name of pisé it is also a material for sculptures, usually small and made in molds. It has been especially used in Central Asia and Tibetan art, and sometimes in China.

Edifices formed of rammed earth are on every continent except Antarctica, in a range of environments including temperate, wet, semiarid desert, montane, and tropical regions. The availability of suitable soil and a building design appropriate for local climatic conditions are the factors that favour its use.

The French term "pisé de terre" or "terre pisé" was sometimes used in English for architectural uses, especially in the 19th century.

What is the Russian for rammed-earth construction? Translation of &#39rammed-earth construction&#39