's kitchen and an adjoining
ondol room
Buttumaks in agrarian Korean kitchens were commonly made from
brick or
stone and then smoothed with
clay. Above each
agungi is an upward opening where
gamasot (big pot or cauldron used on
agungi) can be set onto the
buttumak. A kitchen may have
buttumak with multiple
agungi holes and upward openings, or a single
agungi hole and a single upward opening. Each
agungi can be covered with an iron plate or door to control the fire.
Agungi and
buttumak are among the main components of the traditional
ondol (floor heating) system. Vents in the back of
agungi are opened on cold days to allow the smoke and hot air flow through the
flues underneath
ondol rooms and exit into the chimney at the other end of the house. == Influences ==