Some are green as pasture while others are golden in color.
Houses with grass roofs in norway.
Turf roofs in norway are a tradition and you will see them everywhere.
For hundreds of years houses in norway have been covered with turf.
Roofs in scandinavia have probably been covered with birch bark and sod since prehistory.
I dont think so first i think this is natural but the norwegians traditional type of green roof co.
A sod roof or turf roof is a traditional scandinavian type of green roof covered with sod on top of several layers of birch bark on gently sloping wooden roof boards.
Grass roofs in norway is this the way of going go green.
Others are golden and look like they re growing wheat or oats.
These roofs are covered with sod on top of several layers of birch bark on gently sloping wooden roof boards.
They look like hobbit homes or houses for fairies but scandinavian grass roofs are the real deal.
Norwegian grass roofs the norwegian translation is torvtak which means turf roof.
During the viking and middle ages most houses had sod roofs.
Its distribution roughly corresponds to the distribution of the log building technique in the.
Some are bright green and almost velvety.
Houses with their roofs looking like small meadows may seem a little strange in these modern times but until the late 19th century turf roofs were the most common type of roofs in rural norway.
Green roofs have become a long standing tradition in norway and it s not common to see them dotting the country s landscape or in this case essentially melding with the landscape.
The load of approximately 250 kg per m of a sod roof is an advantage because it helps to compress.
In rural areas sod roofs were almost universal until the beginning of the 18th century.