In
Upper Normandy and in the
pays d'Auge,
Mortainais,
Passais and
Avranchin (
Lower Normandy), the vernacular domestic
architecture is typically
half-timbered and
thatched. The half-timbered farmhouses scattered across the countryside are inherited from an older tradition that has its roots in the Celtic farms, the remains of which have been excavated by archeologists. A particular style of farmstead called
clos masure or
cour-masure developed in the
Pays de Caux as a result of the harsher landscape of that area and local tradition, which has been influenced by English and Danish styles. Brick and flintstone were later used to build or rebuild some of the cottages and public buildings, such as town halls. Some villages of the pays de Caux and the
Pays de Bray were entirely rebuilt this way. The other parts of
Lower Normandy, especially the
Cotentin Peninsula, tends to use granite as the predominant local building material. The
Channel Islands also share this influence –
Chausey was for many years a source of quarried granite, including stone for the construction of Mont Saint-Michel. The
Caen plain and the area of
Bessin use the traditional unusually hard limestone, called
Caen stone. == Urban vernacular style ==