What do the traditional pol houses teach us for contemporary dwellings in India?

dc.centreFaculty of Technology
dc.contributor.authorRajan Rawal
dc.date.accessioned2025-02-20T12:40:03Z
dc.date.available2025-02-20T12:40:03Z
dc.date.issuedJul-17
dc.description.abstractIndian real estate is trying to find appropriate solutions to provide thermally comfortable dwellings using passive design strategies. Historically, a big part of architectural teaching has been focused on learning about climate responsive strategies from vernacular buildings. However, such knowledge sharing was based more on observational studies as opposed to long-term scientific field studies with quantitative outcomes. The authors believe rigorous scientific enquiry is required to understand the performance of vernacular dwellings in order to encourage the use of climate responsive strategies. This study looks at the vernacular dwellings, called pol houses, as well as the contemporary dwellings to assess their thermal comfort performance. Indoor environmental conditions in these houses were monitored hourly for a year. Outdoor conditions were also recorded using a weather station simultaneously. Selected dwellings were compared on the basis of area, occupancy and socio-economic background. Thermal performance of these houses was evaluated against two models � the India Model for Adaptive Comfort (IMAC) and the ASHRAE Standard-55 adaptive model.
dc.identifier.otherFP-142-CP
dc.identifier.sourcelinkhttps://www.researchgate.net/publication/321309565_What_do_the_traditional_pol_houses_teach_us_for_contemporary_dwellings_in_India
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12725/27300
dc.publisherIn PLEA 2017 Edinburgh: Design to Thrive
dc.titleWhat do the traditional pol houses teach us for contemporary dwellings in India?
dc.typeConference Paper

Files