Vernacular Heritage as a Response to Climate: Lessons for Future Climate Resilience from Rize, Turkey
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Literature: Local People’s Knowledge and Perceptions on Changing Climate and Landscape
2. Methodology
2.1. Case Study Area
2.1.1. Data Collection
2.1.2. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Past Knowledge
“Back then, Fındıklı was a swamp. In other words, no one would have settled in the city centre due to the mosquitoes and swamps…Our grandfather…came here… built his home there…on the hill across here…”
“Here the houses are distant…In the past, the mansions were built on top of the cornfield so that the rainwater carried the scat of animals down to the slope and fertilized the land.”
“When I saw the first great snowfall in our village in 1948, there was three metres high snow cover. Two metres and a half. It did not snow in the last two years, including this year. When there is no snowfall, it does nothing good to agriculture.”
“Timber trusses hold the roof. In addition, there are timber beams that stand next to each other to hold the roof tiles. Poles under the trusses carry the full weight. I know with the help of the neighbor that the snow used to be cleared from the roof when the snow is very heavy. The neighbors would step in the clearance of snow from the rooftop.”
3.2. Current Problems
3.2.1. Flooding
“There was a flood 50 years or 45 years ago but the most serious one was in 2016… The damage in the Beydere village was more severe. A child was drowned.”
“The land facing the rear façade eroded twice. We were affected by it. It eroded two years ago, and the rear façade degraded twice. North facade… There are a lot of landslides happening here and this why this area of Caglayan village is announced as a landslide zone… An eanormous storage house has gone down below. There are a few storage houses that went as such, some houses in Aslandere and Beydere villages were damaged by floods… The upper villages were affected more severely.”
“There was a beautiful old storage house on the side. It [referring to the flooding] damaged the storage house too…They came to us while they [referring to the owner of the storage house] escaped from the disaster, they sheltered here…”
3.2.2. Landslides
“The land there was eroded. It shook the storage house but didn’t demolish it. However, this time, it destroyed the trees… There was a landslide at the back of my house, even though it is not a tea field…“
“Couldn’t these be thought of when these structures were built? The storage house is 250–200 years old why did they build it here? If I knew, I would dismantle it and rebuild it in another place… I sometimes think whether I should change the position of the main door this way?”
“Landslide happened this way. It is not because it rained a lot here. Here, a natural water discharge came and drained the water there. The excessive water maybe came from the sea as a hose…, so the rainwater damages something along the way. But in this case, there was no place to accumulate water.”
3.2.3. Rainfall
“Now even the crops are not growing. The environment is decaying. We do organic farming with pigeon manure, but the weather pattern has changed. For example, orange drops timelessly, but it should not fall from its tree so early. It has just matured. We produced the orange in 2017 but it is not ripening this year…But now the fruits do not mature enough and fall from the trees earlier.”
“We took the car and waited inside the car in the school garden. Rain falls, then the rain level goes up to 25 cm as if a movie is directed…It was raining in the past too, but I have not seen anything like that. Now that we experienced it, we are afraid.”
“Both this part of the façade and wooden windows are decayed… Çakatura type of construction technique could not survive.”
3.3. Future Threats
4. Discussion and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Interviewee | Gender | Relevancy | Profession | Villages | No. of Interviews | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
C.K. | Male | Homeowner | Retired/teacher | Hara | 3 | 3 July 2019 |
F.H. | Female | Homeowner | Retired | Çağlayan | 1 | 12 January 2019 |
G.A. | Female | Homeowner | Retired | Hara | 1 | 3 July 2019 |
H.Ş. | Male | Homeowner | Retired/teacher | Çağlayan | 1 | 30 June 2019 |
M.A. | Male | Farmer | Retired | Çağlayan | 1 | 12 January 2019 |
Ş.S. | Male | Stone mason | Constructor | Fındıklı centre | 1 | 14 January 2019 |
S.T. | Female | Homeowner | Housewife | Gürsu | 1 | 2 July 2019 |
Ş.Ö. | Male | Homeowner | Land registry | Çağlayan | 1 | 6 July 2019 |
S.Ş. | Female | Homeowner | Retired | Çağlayan | 1 | 11 January 2019 |
Y.G. | Male | Homeowner | Retired | Çağlayan | 1 | 5 July 2019 |
Y.Y. | Male | Project Manager | Teacher | Fındıklı centre | 1 | 11 January 2019 |
A.S. | Male | Stone mason | Constructor | Beydere | 1 | 11 January 2019 |
B.U. | Female | Homeowner | Retired/teacher | Çağlayan | 1 | 10 January 2019 |
T.H. | Male | Homeowner | Retired | Gürsu | 1 | 2 July 2019 |
Themes | Codes | Example Quotations | No. of Quotes |
---|---|---|---|
Past Stories | Past climate | “It is snowing less now compared to the past. In the past, the rain was more excessive, but there is still rain otherwise the tea crops would not grow.” | 9 |
Past settlements | “In the past, they used to build a house above the cornfield…” | 8 | |
Flooding | “When the rivers flooded, no one is around.” | 14 | |
Current Problems | Landslide | “Here is a landslide zone.” | 16 |
Rainfall | “But what rain, I have not seen anything like. It again rained like this last year.” | 3 | |
Future threats | Climate resilience | “The native tiles are water-resistant and durable.” | 17 |
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Aktürk, G.; Fluck, H. Vernacular Heritage as a Response to Climate: Lessons for Future Climate Resilience from Rize, Turkey. Land 2022, 11, 276. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11020276
Aktürk G, Fluck H. Vernacular Heritage as a Response to Climate: Lessons for Future Climate Resilience from Rize, Turkey. Land. 2022; 11(2):276. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11020276
Chicago/Turabian StyleAktürk, Gül, and Hannah Fluck. 2022. "Vernacular Heritage as a Response to Climate: Lessons for Future Climate Resilience from Rize, Turkey" Land 11, no. 2: 276. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11020276
APA StyleAktürk, G., & Fluck, H. (2022). Vernacular Heritage as a Response to Climate: Lessons for Future Climate Resilience from Rize, Turkey. Land, 11(2), 276. https://doi.org/10.3390/land11020276