Wychert or witchert (with a number of variant spellings existing and meaning "white earth") is a natural blend of white chalk and clay[1] which is mixed with straw to make walls and buildings, usually then thatched or topped with red clay tiles. This historic method of building construction is mainly localised to Haddenham and the surrounding local area in Buckinghamshire. Also found, amongst others, as a similar 'slow process' construction is a thatched example of 'mud wall' (made of Liassic subsoil) surrounding two sides of the churchyard at St. Luke's Church, Laughton, Leicestershire. One of the largest known wychert structures is Haddenham Methodist Church.[2]
The method of building with wychert is similar to that of a cob building. To maintain the rigid nature of wychert it must not become too dry for risk of crumbling, nor too wet for risk of turning to a slime. Keeping wychert well ventilated and not subject to excess condensation is therefore highly recommended. Any render applied to a wychert wall must therefore be of a breathable material — rendering wychert walls with a lime based render is therefore common practice.
A wychert house has been constructed at Chiltern Open Air Museum in Chalfont St Peter, Buckinghamshire.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Sharpe, Geoffrey R. Traditional Buildings of the English Countryside: An Illustrated Guide. London: I.B. Tauris; 2011. 155. Print.
- ^ "Vale of Aylesbury - Haddenham".
External links
edit- Earth Buildings and their Repair - by Dirk Bouwens
- Haddenham Museum with opening hours
- The Witchert Buildings of Buckinghamshire, England:Learning Sustainable Construction from our Ancestors(Google cached version accessed 10 March 2006)