Turf homes became popular in Iceland in the 9th century. Vikings brought the grass and mud home design with them from Norway. A land of vast open spaces, steaming blue lagoons, geysers, and powerful ...
Each week, Roads & Kingdoms and Slate publish a new dispatch from around the globe. For more foreign correspondence mixed with food, war, travel, and photography, visit their online magazine or follow ...
A few craftsman in Iceland still practice the technique of building with turf, a tradition believed to date to the ninth century settlement of Europe's most sparsely-populated country. With walls and ...
Melissa Breyer was Treehugger’s senior editorial director before moving to Martha Stewart. Her writing and photography have been featured in The New York Times, The Guardian, National Geographic, ...
Share the best of The Jakarta Post with friends, family, or colleagues. As a subscriber, you can gift 3 to 5 articles each month that anyone can read—no subscription needed! n the Thjorsardalur valley ...
Known as "torfbæir", these ingeniously designed homes helped settle one of Europe's least-hospitable environments. With its lonely lava fields, sheer bluffs and stark boulder-strewn plains, Iceland is ...
If you are a Lord of the Rings fan just like me, you can understand how dreamy the Hobbiton Shire looks. A world right out of a fairytale, the peaceful life that the Hobbits live in their green holes ...
These abandoned medieval turf houses are common in the Icelandic landscape. In the past, they offered good insulation compared to buildings made of wood or stone ...
These abandoned medieval turf houses are common in the Icelandic landscape. (AFPrelaxnews pic) In the Thjorsardalur valley in Iceland’s southern highlands, the first green shoots are starting to ...