#GC2022 is accepting submissions - 25d 27h 05m 44s

search
×
menu
login
donate
 
Yurt / Ger
Mongolia
Written by:
follow
share on:mail linkcopy link to clipboardShare via LinkedInShare via TwitterShare via FacebookShare via Facebook
Traditional dwelling of the nomads.

image: Jamie McDonald | © all rights reserved
i
Category:
housing
Phase:
in use
Updated:
25 May 2021
introduction

Marco Polo, the first Westerner to visit the Mongolian Empire in the 14th century, wrote about the Mongolian house “...They [the Mongols] have circular houses made of wood and covered with felt, which they carry about with them on four-wheeled wagons wherever they go. The framework of rods is so neatly and skillfully constructed that it is light to carry. And every time they unfold their house and set it up, the door is always facing south.”

 

read more >
< read less
cultural and social context

Gers have been in use at least since the 13th century, and there are indications that the design is much older. The prefabricated felt tent meets the requirements of Mongolian nomadism which heavily influences the culture of Mongolia. According to Mongolian artist and art critic N. Chultem, gers and tents were the basis for the development of traditional Mongolian architecture.

The design of the Mongolian ger developed from its ancient simple forms to actively integrate with Buddhist culture. The crown—toono adopted the shape of Dharmachakra. The earlier style of toono is called in Mongolia "sarkhinag toono", while the toono representing Buddhist dharmachakra is called "khorlo" (Tibetan འཀོར་ལོ།) toono. Also the shapes, colours and ornaments of the wooden elements—toono, pillars and poles of the Mongolian yurt are in accord with the artistic style found in Buddhist monasteries of Mongolia. Such yurts are called "uyangiin ger" -- literally meaning "yurt of lyrics" or "yurt of melodies".

In the 16th and 17th centuries, monasteries of lamas were built throughout the country. Many of them started as ger-shaped temples. When they needed to be enlarged to accommodate the growing number of worshippers, the Mongolian architects used structures with 6 and 12 angles with pyramidal roofs to approximate to the round shape of a yurt. Slowly, the typical trellis walls, roof poles and felt layers of ger were replaced by stone, brick, beams and planks, and became permanent.

In the 21st century, approximately 35% of the population live in yurts, many of them in the suburbs of cities. The Mongolian word "ger" has additional connotations of "home". The stylistically elevated register for ger is örgöö, most commonly translated as "residence" or "palace".

A high percentage of the Mongolian population retains a nomadic lifestyle and gers can be seen throughout the country, whether on the steppes, the Gobi Desert, or the mountainous regions in Central and Western Mongolia. Gers are still the most common type of habitation in Mongolia nowadays. Even in the capital city of Ulaanbaatar (sometimes known as Ulan Bator) there are more than half the population living in gers.

a tent shaped temple

image: Lady Anu | CC-BY-SA_black.png some rights reserved
i
materials and building techniques
Mongolian Ger: starting with walls and door

image: Aloxe | CC-BY-SA_black.png some rights reserved
i
Mongolian Ger: starting to place roof poles

image: CC-BY-SA_black.png some rights reserved
i
Mongolian Ger: with roof poles in place

image: CC-BY-SA_black.png some rights reserved
i
Mongolian Ger: placing the thin inner cover on the roof

image: CC-BY-SA_black.png some rights reserved
i
Mongolian Ger: adding felt cover

image: CC-BY-SA_black.png some rights reserved
i
Mongolian Ger: adding the outer cover

image: CC-BY-SA_black.png some rights reserved
i
earth and climate

In the landlocked steppe of Central Asia, the Mongols since ancient times have lived in tribal groups, enduring an extreme climate and landscape, with rugged mountains, Gobi desert in the south, cold and mountainous regions in the north and west and dry steppe lands and harsh winters in the north.

Mongolia has an extreme continental climate with long, cold winters and short summers, during which most of its annual precipitation falls. Sunshine is intense and clouds cover the sky practically only in summer. 280 days of full sun per year gave Mongolia its nickname of the Country of Blue Skies. Most of the country is hot in the summer and extremely cold in the winter, with January averages dropping as low as −30 °C (−22 °F).And it is usually at the centre of a region of high atmospheric pressure.

Economic activity in Mongolia has traditionally been based on herding and agriculture, although development of Mining has emerged as a driver of industrial production. In 2002, about 30% of all households in Mongolia lived from breeding lifestock. Most herders in Mongolia follow a pattern of nomadic or semi-nomadic pastoralism.

Frequent spring fires following dry winters as in 1996 had a devastating effect on significant surfaces. The very rigorous and snow abundant winters in 1999 and 2000 caused massive losses not only among domestic livestock but among wild species as well, especially gazelles and antelopes. The last two summer’s drought was alarming by its effect on the water level of rivers and wells. Desertification is taking place in the south of the country threatening to turn the steppes into deserts. The natural erosion of these windy grounds is accentuated by increased pressure on pastures after livestock privatization.

Combined with the high atmospheric pressures, Ulaanbaatar faces with significant air pollution, especially in the winter season, due to emissions of rapidly increasing automobile traffic, smoke from power stations and ger areas heated with fuel and coal.

Despite these threats to its virginity, Mongolia offers an example of inhabited natural environments, exploited but still little impacted by the presence of man, that have become rare elsewhere in the world.

image gallery
construction

image: Hugues | CC-BY-SA_black.png some rights reserved
i
interior

image: Hugues | CC-BY-SA_black.png some rights reserved
i
interior

image: Hugues | CC-BY-SA_black.png some rights reserved
i
Gers near Ulan Bator city centreGers near UB city centre

image: Jeremy Weate | CC-BY_black.png some rights reserved
i
daily life

image: CC-BY_black.png some rights reserved
i
Location
show earth plate boundarieshide earth plate boundaries
Explore more inspirations
Keyword:
community (80)
tent (1)
temporary (11)
prev
  •  meeting place
    Fairy Water Village Community Center
    Chen Zhou, China
  •  education
    Njoro Children's Library
    Mailisita, Kilimanjaro , Tanzania
  •  emergency shelter
    Catenarius
    Paraguay
  •  emergency shelter
    Low-cost modular housing scheme
    Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
  •  education
    Thnouh School
    Takeo, Cambodia
  •  housing
    Granby Four Streets
    Liverpool, United Kingdom
  •  housing
    La Passerelle, France
    Seine Saint-Denis, France
  •  housing
    JINTAI VILLAGE RECONSTRUCTION
    JINTAI, China
  •  education
    Semonkong Community School
    Semonkong, Lesotho
  •  infrastructure
    Community toilets for SPARC
    mumbai, India
  •  housing
    Casa OE
    Campamento -Jama , Ecuador
  •  infrastructure
    Jogen Babu Maath slum - infrastructure
    Dinajpur, Bangladesh
  •  meeting place
    Generating Resilience
    Majuli, India
  •  housing
    Casa Rosales
    Tlalnepantla Morelos, Mexico
  •  meeting place
    “Sorbole” - Urban garden’s equipment
    Seville, Spain
  •  meeting place
    Naidi Community Hall
    Naidi Village, Fiji
  •  education
    Silindokuhle Preschool
    Port Elizabeth, South Africa
  •  education
    Muping Village School
    Guizhou, China
  •  education
    P'Yan School Project
    Mae Sot, Thailand
  •  recreation & sport
    Olive Grove Open Air cinema
    Moria, Lesvos, Greece
  •  meeting place
    Pavilions For Okana
    Okana Road, Kenya
  •  education
    A school for Syrian refugee children in Lebanon, once was a pavilion in an International expo in Italy.
    Al-Marj, Bekaa, Lebanon
  •  education
    Siddhartha Primary School
    Bimire village, Nepal
  •  meeting place
    Sunu Xarit Aminata cultural center
    Gandiol, Senegal
  •  meeting place
    Palenque Tambillo: Afroecuadorian Cultural Center
    Tambillo, Ecuador
  •  meeting place
    Pondok Tagal
    Kampung Maligan, Malaysia
  •  meeting place
    Pol houses (residential cluster)
    Ahmedabad, India
  •  housing
    Floating dwellings
    Dong Nai, Vietnam
  •  housing
    boat houses
    Ine, Kyoto, Japan
  •  meeting place
    Old Market Library
    Bangkok, Thailand
  •  housing
    Torre de David
    Caracas, Venezuela
  •  meeting place
    Indian Coffee House
    Thampanoor, India
  •  housing
    Edifício São Vito
    São Paulo, Brazil
  •  meeting place
    Liyuan Library
    Jiao jie he (交界河村), China
  •  meeting place
    open architecture
    Tokyo, Japan
  •  urban planning
    The High Line
    New York, U.S.A.
  •  meeting place
    Centro de Acçao Social por Música
    São Paulo, Brazil
  •  meeting place
    Tiuna El Fuerte
    Caracas, Venezuela
  •  urban planning
    De Ceuvel
    Amsterdam, Netherlands
  •  housing
    Fujian Tulou
    Fujian, China
  •  religion & memorial
    Tógu nà
    Dogon, Mali
  •  housing
    Kampung Kali Chode, Yogyakarta
    Yogyakarta, Indonesia
  •  meeting place
    Centre for Urban Poor Consortium
    Parung, Regency of Bogor, Indonesia
  •  education
    Initiative Rising Star - school buildings for Hopley, Zimbabwe
    Harare, Zimbabwe
  •  housing
    Eden Bio
    Paris, France
  •  agriculture & fisheries
    Community Greenhouse
    Quito, Ecuador
  •  housing
    Batak Toba Houses
    Lake Toba, Indonesia
  •  education
    PLAYSCAPE
    Koh Rong Island, Cambodia
  •  housing
    Palafitos
    Castro, Chile
  •  meeting place
    Atellier-Progressive House / Earthquake
    Manabí-Esmeraldas, Ecuador
  •  housing
    Project Chacras; Pop up Productive Housing
    Arenillas, Ecuador
  •  housing
    HATHIGAON - Housing for Mahouts and their Elephants
    Jaipur, India
  •  housing
    Tulou Collective Housing
    Nanhai, Guangdong, China
  •  housing
    Dorchester Art + Housing Collaborative
    Chicago, Illinois, U.S.A.
  •  meeting place
    Kazi na Bobo - community shop built with plastic bottles
    Msitu wa Tembo, Tanzania
  •  health & sanitation
    Hammam Khist-i-Kopruk
    Kholm, Balkh province, Afghanistan
  •  education
    Collective School in Fansirà Corò
    Yelekebougou, Mali
  •  housing
    Ruca Dwellings
    Huechuraba, Chile
  •  work & business
    Bike Shop
    Msitu Wa Tembo, Tanzania
  •  education
    Temiar Green School
    Kampung Penad, Malaysia
  •  health & sanitation
    Butaro hospital
    Burera, Rwanda
  •  recreation & sport
    Kimisagara Community Centre
    Kimisagara, Rwanda
  •  education
    FAVA School for Individuals with Autism
    Caracas, Venezuela
  •  health & sanitation
    Rwinkwavu Neonatal Intensive Care Unit
    Kayonza District, Rwanda
  •  health & sanitation
    Vaccination and information centre Sangha
    Sangha, Mali
  •  housing
    Mousgoum dwellings
    Pouss, Cameroon
  •  education
    Playgrounds for Refugees as emergency response
    Bar Elias, Lebanon
  •  meeting place
    Farmers' Innovation Center (BLF)
    Angangba (Nagaland), India
  •  meeting place
    A tree for a house
    Maji Moto, Tanzania
  •  meeting place
    BE friendly space
    Mao Khe, Vietnam
  •  education
    PAUD Nur Hikmat
    Tasikmalaya, Indonesia
  •  meeting place
    Community Center
    Oudong, Cambodia
  •  meeting place
    Park to Park
    Fort Wayne, Indiana, U.S.A.
  •  education
    Training Center for Mae Tao Clinic
    Mae Sot, Thailand
  •  emergency shelter
    Kibera Girls Soccer Academy Community Center and Boarding Dormitory
    Kibera (Nairobi), Kenya
  •  religion & memorial
    Bamboo chapels
    Jama, Ecuador
  •  meeting place
    BES Pavilion
    Ha Tinh city, Vietnam
  •  health & sanitation
    Hygiene Station for Cattlefield Village School
    Yunnan, China
  •  meeting place
    THE SHIP WALL OF ANIMAS
    Havana, Cuba
  •  housing
    Le Village Noir
    Gatlang, Nepal
next