Historical small wooden houses with living grass roofs.
Houses with grass roofs faroe islands.
Close up to the á reyni district you will find the political stamping ground in the faroe islands.
First the quaint gjaargarður guest house in gjógv and then the four star foroyar hotel overlooking the bay in the capital torshavn.
8 places to see turf roofed houses 1.
Through the centuries the housing pattern changed.
This is the oldest part of tórshavn with small houses.
In faroe island it rains 300 days during the year so the settlers introduced the grass roofs as it provided protection from the sobbing rain.
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The tiny streets are a maze around it with characteristic grass roofed buildings.
Newly built houses.
Most houses here are inhabited and covered with.
Green roofs scattered along these roads are many grass roofed houses.
The longhouses of the norse settlers were low houses built of turf stone and driftwood under heavy grass roofs.
These started life as a pragmatic solution for dwellings see gallery but have since become a symbol for the islands.
The enchanting faroe islands village with grass roof houses the remote hillside village of saksun lies on the shores of a tranquil turquoise lagoon cradled by rugged fjords.
They actually date back to the age of the vikings which as related to the faroes means.
Driving around the islands you will come across many sod roofs.
Back to the 9th century.
The gjaargarður doesn t just have a grass roof on its main building.
Like many islands the capital is a harbor town.
The enchanting village has 14 inhabitants loads of grazing sheep grass roof houses and a picturesque church built in 1858.
The homes would blend in among the environment as if they were meant to be there.
These roofs date way back to when the homes used to be built into the ground to protect them from the wind and ocean conditions.