Medieval Building Materials: The Real Foundations of Design
1. Stone: Strong, Local, Lasting
2. Timber: Fast, Flexible, Warm. It was fast to build with, easy to shape, and perfect for homes, bridges, and halls.
3. Brick and Clay: Urban and Adaptable. Where stone was rare, bricks filled the gap. Easy to make, light to move, and simple to lay.
4. Wattle and Daub: Wattle and daub is an ancient, composite building technique using a woven lattice of wooden strips (wattle) covered with a sticky mix (daub) of soil, clay, sand, straw, and dung. It was cheap, fast, and surprisingly good at keeping homes dry and warm.
5. Metal: Iron added strength where stone and wood couldn’t. It held gates, windows, hinges—and it looked good doing it.
6. Glass: It brought in light and told stories. Color and design mattered as much as function.