Black Forest house

The farm of Vogtsbauernhof in the eponymous open-air museum
House of a Black Forest peasant farmer around 1900

The Black Forest house[1][2][3] (German: Schwarzwaldhaus) is a byre-dwelling that is found mainly in the central and southern parts of the Black Forest in southwestern Germany. It is characterised externally by a long hipped or half-hipped roof that descends to the height of the ground floor. This type of dwelling is suited to the conditions of the Black Forest: hillside locations, broad tracks, high levels of snowfall and heavy wind loading. Individual farms, such as the Hierahof near Kappel, which are still worked today, are over 400 years old. The Black Forest house is described by Dickinson as very characteristic of the Swabian farmstead type.[1]

  1. ^ a b Dickinson, Robert E (1964). Germany: A regional and economic geography (2nd ed.). London: Methuen, p. 154. ASIN B000IOFSEQ.
  2. ^ Günter Pfeifer, Per Brauneck (2008). Courtyard Houses: A Housing Typology, Volume 1, Birkhäuser, Basel, Boston, Berlin, p. 6. ISBN 978-3-7643-7839-4.
  3. ^ Wood, George (1984). The Visitor's Guide to the Black Forest, Moorland, pp. 104, 146.

© MMXXIII Rich X Search. We shall prevail. All rights reserved. Rich X Search