Turf houses: Iceland's original 'green' buildings (2024)

Heritage Architecture | Architecture

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Turf houses: Iceland's original 'green' buildings (1)

By Luke Waterson14th October 2022

Known as "torfbæir", these ingeniously designed homes helped settle one of Europe's least-hospitable environments.

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With its lonely lava fields, sheer bluffs and stark boulder-strewn plains, Iceland is one of Europe's most barren countries. Across much of the island, the utter remoteness is striking, and that's especially true in the far-flung Northwestern Region, where I had come to learn about how Icelanders were able to settle one of the least hospitable and most volcanically active places on Earth.

Settling Iceland, even for the hardened Norse, was tough back in the 9th Century CE. There were sub-zero temperatures and thick snow cover even on lower-lying ground throughout much of the year. The predominantly rocky nation never yielded the fecund land other European nations did: just one-fifth of it, mostly in the Northwestern Region, is cultivatable to this day. When Norse sailors first spotted the island, Iceland was roughly 30% forested, a low coverage compared to elsewhere in Scandinavia at the time. With limited timber, materials for building houses were hard to come by, especially since the island's basalt rocks were difficult to hew.

All things considered, it's surprising Iceland's settlers even survived. That they did can be attributed to one factor above others: torfbæir (turf houses), which were used for shelter since the days of the first Nordic settlers until the late 20th Century. These dwellings were built around basic timber frames, with blocks cut out of turf (grass and the soil up to 1m thick) arranged over a base layer of rock and packed in to form the structure's walls and roofs. Today, they can still be found across the country, sticking out of the landscape grass-side up like tussocky tents. There are especially good examples open to the public at Glaumbær in the north-west, Laufás in the north and Keldur in the south.

Turf houses: Iceland's original 'green' buildings (2)

The ingenious design of turf houses helped Nordic settlers survive in Iceland (Credit: Kelly Cheng Travel Photography/Getty Images)

As I arrived at Glaumbær Farm & Museum in the northern fjord of Skagafjordur, the golden evening light tinged the homes' grassy rooftops. Built and enlarged over the 18th and 19th Centuries, and used as a priest's house as well as a farmhouse, Glaumbær is Iceland's most extensive and intact group of turf buildings. The main complex's 13 buildings were huddled together like turf terraced housing, the walls of one touching those of the next. There is a front row of six buildings, each sporting a narrow yellow-and-white-painted wood facade, and a passageway connecting the remaining seven structures leads to the living quarters at the back of the complex. Apart from the painted fronts, each structure's exterior – from the steeply pitched roofs to the walls – is made of turf.

I was being shown around by renowned Icelandic turf house expert Sigridur Sigurdadottir, museum director Berglind Thorsteinsdottir and Helgi Sigurdson, a turf house builder specialising in restoring old turf buildings. Though these homes are synonymous with Iceland's rural idyll, life here, each stressed, was difficult and carved out of precious little.

They invited me to imagine travelling in the freezing cold centuries ago and needing to urgently erect shelter without much timber or workable stone. Driftwood was possibly available on shores several miles away; otherwise, you could build only with what you carried in or cut from the bare ground beneath your feet.

"We had nothing else," Sigurdson told me, wryly. "Turf was all that stood between our ancestors and perishing! It was also what settlers knew: they came from places already accustomed to building with this material."

Turf houses: Iceland's original 'green' buildings (3)

Glaumbær is Iceland's most extensive and intact group of turf buildings (Credit: Davide Seddio/Getty Images)

She explained that there is a history of building turf dwellings in similar latitudes as Iceland's – notably in northern Norway's Sámi settlements, on the Faroe Islands, in Greenland and Newfoundland, and even as far south as Scotland's Outer Hebrides. But Iceland's stand out from these for a number of reasons: they were in use for a significantly longer period of time, they were used by all classes of people, they served as everything from sheep pens to churches and they are generally better preserved today.

"For us, it is still a living, breathing history," Thorsteinsdottir said. "My grandfather lived in a turf house; many Icelanders did until well into the 20th Century. The last-known occupancy of a turf house as a home here was 1992, and many are still used as farm outbuildings, so these buildings are part of our recent collective memory."

Partly as a result of having been used so recently, torfbæir offer unique historical insights into turf house-building techniques and the living conditions of their occupants. That said, many turf dwellings across Iceland have been modified. Where there was no need to maintain them as part of a residence, authorities rebuilt some for tourism purposes, prettifying them rather than faithfully reconstructing them according to original techniques.

"They are straightforward enough to restore wrongly, but harder to do with historical accuracy," Sigurdson said. "What looks simple to build now was a skilled art, fine-tuned over centuries. There is no manual. When I started restoring these buildings, the only ones who knew how to do it were the local farmers who still had turf building on their lands, so I talked to them to learn techniques."

Turf houses: Iceland's original 'green' buildings (4)

Turf buildings were built with meticulously measured blocks of packed soil and grass (Credit: Luke Waterson)

Sigurdson learned that a seasoned turf house builder would know timing was everything when cutting their turf for house construction. Late summer or early autumn was best, when conditions were neither too wet nor dry, and when roots bound the soil more firmly.

Building blocks were no uneven lumps, either, but meticulously measured. Torfbæir used two main types of building blocks, both made of packed soil and grass, but shaped differently. Klömbur (clamped building blocks) were angled triangular wedges, with a tapered inward-facing tail stretched across the wall's thickness to knit into the structure and strengthen it. Meanwhile, Glaumbæjarhnausar (Glaumbær blocks), which were rectangular, ran up to 1m across the whole wall's thickness, and when interlaid with strengir (turf strips) made the strongest wall type. As turf continued growing and fusing after placement, structures would become stronger and more weather-resistant over time.

Each structure in a turf building complex was built individually and placed alongside the next, thus cutting costs by sharing walls and increasing the warmth of the innermost structures. These innermost structures would house the living quarters. The Icelandic translation of living quarters, baðstofa or "bath stove", reveals what the key function of these rooms was: providing warmth. From the 9th to the 18th Centuries, these living quarters had no additional heating besides human or animal body heat. They did not need it, as the grass and earth provided insulation from the cold.

"Even with smaller details, they thought of remarkable solutions to the problems posed by the absence of other materials," said Sigurdadottir. "For example, the dark interiors and the smoke in the kitchen helped preserve both foodstuffs and the timber framework. And the windows in the baðstofa: glass was a barely known luxury there until the 1800s, so they stretched sheep stomach and amniotic sacks lining across the frame."

Turf houses: Iceland's original 'green' buildings (5)

As Icelanders moved from turf houses to modern houses, some began complaining of the increased cold (Credit: Vadim_Nefedov/Getty Images)

Around the beginning of the 20th Century, philanthropists intervened, bemoaning the impracticality and unsavoury living conditions of turf houses. Timber, stone and then concrete, which were more readily available from the mid-19th Century onwards as overseas trade increased, became more commonly used for construction. Yet, it took time for modern homes to supersede turf. Icelanders liked what they knew, and what they knew had worked well for a long time. Many, moving from torfbæir to these new buildings, actually began complaining of the increased cold.

"The importance of Icelandic turf houses goes beyond turf – it is also aesthetics, as part of the national heritage," said Hjörleifur Stefánsson, an Icelandic architect who has studied turf houses for several decades. "Turf houses are not rigid: they are living organisms, changing and renewing constantly. They have their own legacy. The designer William Morris, for example, took inspiration in his work from Icelandic turf houses."

He then showed me pictures of his own turf house, which he is currently building.

"I want to make the landscape glide into the building," he said, "like the turf houses of old."

Heritage Architectureis a BBC Travel series that exploresthe world's mostinteresting and unusual buildings that define a place through aesthetic beauty and inventive ways of adapting to local environments.

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Turf houses: Iceland's original 'green' buildings (2024)

FAQs

Turf houses: Iceland's original 'green' buildings? ›

Turf house

Turf house
Icelandic turf houses (Icelandic: torfbæir [ˈtʰɔrvˌpaijɪr̥]) are timber structures with turf walls and turf as a cover for the roof. Turf houses have been constructed since Iceland was settled in the 9th century.
https://en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Icelandic_turf_house
building techniques in Iceland have evolved over time, but the materials have remained the same. Most turf houses have a wooden frame structure, and stones are sometimes used in the walls as well. The turf is cut from the ground and the mats are then stacked on top of each other to form walls.

What is the history of turf houses in Iceland? ›

They date back over 1,000 years to the 9th Century. Iceland's resources then (as now) consisted of plenty of wetlands and volcanic stone, but relatively little woodland compared to settlers' home countries in Scandinavia. So, using stone and turf was a logical step in building shelter.

Why did Iceland ban turf houses? ›

Mice and lice often lived in the turf, and very bad storms could sometimes peel up the roofs. Turf houses also required a lot of maintenance, and depending on the severity of the winter needed to be re-turfed every 20 or so years.

What are grass covered houses in Iceland? ›

Turf houses have been constructed since Iceland was settled in the 9th century. Turf houses were the product of a difficult climate, offering superior insulation compared to buildings solely made of wood or stone, and the relative difficulty in obtaining other construction materials in sufficient quantities.

Why do Icelandic houses have red roofs? ›

Why are Icelandic houses so colorful? The tradition has its roots in the primary building material of the early 20th century: corrugated iron. Iceland was a poor country and embraced this material usually reserved for roofs. These houses then needed to be painted to stop them from rusting.

What are the green buildings in Iceland? ›

Iceland's green building history started with the use of turf houses due to the scarcity of timber and difficulties in working with basalt rocks. Turf houses, built using turf blocks over a base layer of rock, provided insulation and warmth from the cold Icelandic climate.

How long do turf houses last? ›

Turf houses only last for roughly a century, which means that all of the islandic turf houses are no older than the 19th century. Many of the buildings are mentioned in older sources, but were rebuilt again and again throughout the ages.

Why can't horses go to Iceland? ›

Yes, it's true; once they leave the country, Icelandic horses are not allowed to return. The ancient Althing parliament passed laws in 982 AD preventing the importation of any other horse breeds to the island. So, for over a thousand years, the Icelandic breed has been kept in complete isolation.

Why did Iceland not allow dogs? ›

Why were dogs banned In Iceland? Dogs were banned from Reykjavik at a time when the population was growing quickly, and there were many stray dogs in the city scavenging for food. Some of the dogs were carrying parasites that could pass to humans, including tapeworm.

Why are there no old buildings in Iceland? ›

Over time, these buildings simply decomposed into themselves and there's really nothing left except the stone barrier that drew the blueprint of the house. So over the centuries from settlement until the 1700s, most of the buildings that Icelanders built decomposed because they're made of the earth itself.

What is the dark side of living in Iceland? ›

Cons of living in Iceland

Harsh weather: Iceland experiences cold and dark winters, with limited daylight hours, and unpredictable weather patterns.

What is a Viking turf house? ›

As their name suggests, turf is one of the main materials used for its construction. Timber is used for the structure, turf is laid to form the thick walls and as a cover for the roof. Sometimes stones are used with or without the turf for the walls, and slates can be used as an underlay for the roof.

What are homes in Iceland heated with? ›

Currently geothermal power heats 89% of the houses in Iceland, and over 54% of the primary energy used in Iceland comes from geothermal sources. Geothermal power is used for many things in Iceland.

Why are houses painted black in Iceland? ›

In Iceland, the contrasting use of black paint and metal cladding on buildings serves both practical and aesthetic purposes. The black paint helps absorb sunlight and retain heat, essential in the country's cold climate.

What religion is in Iceland? ›

Religion in Iceland

The national church is the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Iceland and 80% of the population identify as such. Almost 5% of people practice ásatrú, the traditional Norse religion.

Why are underground homes used in Iceland? ›

Underground homes are sometimes used in Iceland to help insulate homes from harsh, cold conditions. The cold, windy, and dark climate in Iceland can make it difficult and expensive to heat homes.

Why did Vikings cover their roofs with grass? ›

Perhaps the reason grass roofs were originally used hundreds of years ago is the plants' role in insulating the home. The plants can keep warmth within the home in the winter, as well as keep the house cool during summer months.

Why do farmers use greenhouses in Iceland? ›

While greenhouse crops do experience output fluctuations, they tend to be gradual (Statistics Iceland). sparse arable land and harsh climate, greenhouses provide the opportunity for more variety, longer growing seasons, and a greater yield of crops than could be achieved in the traditional method.

What are the little houses in Iceland for? ›

Icelandic elves are full human size and live inside cliffs and hills. Most of these houses have been built by the Icelandic people and put up to warn others about the presence of elves in the region.

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