•
Airey house: a type of low-cost house that was developed in the United Kingdom during the 1940s by Sir
Edwin Airey, and then widely constructed between 1945 and 1960 to provide housing for soldiers, sailors, and
airmen who had returned home from
World War II. These are recognizable by their
precast concrete columns and by their walls made of precast "ship-lap" concrete panels. •
Assam-type House: an earthquake-resistant house type commonly found in the northeastern states of India •
Bastle house: a fortified
farmhouse found in England and Scotland •
Castle: a high-status defensive structure/dwelling built during the
Middle Ages, with some mock castles built in the 18th century to today. •
Converted barn: an old barn converted into a house or other use. •
Earth sheltered: houses using
dirt ("earth") piled against it exterior walls for thermal mass, which reduces heat flow into or out of the house, maintaining a more steady indoor
temperature •
Pit-house: a prehistoric house type used on many continents and of many styles, partially sunken into the ground. •
Rammed earth •
Sod house •
Earthbag home •
Souterrain: an earthen dwelling typically deriving from
Neolithic Age or
Bronze Age times. •
Underground home: a type of dwelling dug and constructed underground. Ex. A Rammed-Earth Style House •
Yaodong: a
dugout used as an
abode or shelter in northern China, especially on the
Loess Plateau •
Wattle and daub •
Adobe: a type of
mudbrick house made of dirt and straw with mud used as mortar. Found throughout the world, in particular Spain, North Africa, the Middle East and the Americas. •
Igloo: an
Inuit,
Yup'ik, and
Aleut seasonal or emergency shelter that was made of knife-sliced blocks of packed snow and/or ice in the
Arctic regions of
Alaska, Canada, Greenland, and
Siberian Russia. •
Kit house: a type of pre-fabricated house made of pre-cut, numbered pieces of lumber. •
Sears Catalog Home: an owner-built "kit" houses that were sold by the
Sears, Roebuck and Co. corporation via catalog orders from 1906 to 1940. •
Laneway house: a type of Canadian house that is constructed behind a normal single-family home that opens onto a
back lane •
Log home, Log cabin: a house built by American, Canadian, and Russian
frontiersmen and their families which was built of solid, unsquared
wooden logs and later as a well crafted style of dwelling •
Plank house: a general term for houses built using planks in a variety of ways •
Pole house: a timber house in which a set of vertical poles carry the load of all of its suspended floors and roof, allowing all of its walls to be non-load-bearing. •
Prefabricated house: a house whose main structural sections were manufactured in a
factory, and then transported to their final building site to be assembled upon a
concrete foundation, which had to be poured locally. •
Manufactured house: a
prefabricated house that is assembled on the permanent site on which it will sit. •
Modular home: a
prefabricated house that consists of repeated sections called modules. •
Lustron house: a type of
prefabricated house •
Reefer container housing units •
Stilt houses or
Pile dwellings: houses raised on stilts over the surface of the soil or a body of water. •
Tree house: a house built among the branches or around the trunk of one or more mature trees and does not rest on the ground. •
Upper Lusatian house or
Umgebinde: combined log and timber-frame construction in Germany-Czech Republic-Poland region •
Wimpey no-fines house: a low-cost semi-attached or terraced houses built in the United Kingdom from the 1940s onwards using
concrete without fine
aggregates ("no-fine") == Single-family attached ==