Putucos: What A Indigenous Technique Can Tell Us About Sustainability

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As a part of the XV Taller Social Latinoamericano architectural conference that took place in Puno, Peru, we visited the Iruito Tupi zone in Huancané province alongside Francisco Mariscal, Director of the Puno Cultural Center. For the conference, Mariscal gave a presentation on the history of putucos, pre-Columbian houses made with a mixture of earth and grass.

History has the habit of repeating itself; using the same script, just with different names, figures, and places. Some 10,000 years ago, the Altiplano and the Titicaca lake basin, wedged between modern day Peru and Bolivia, became home to hunters and gatherers who subsisted on the herds of llamas and vicuñas as well as the bounty of birds and fish.

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Cite: Valencia, Nicolás. "Putucos: What A Indigenous Technique Can Tell Us About Sustainability" [Putucos: la arquitectura vernacular tiene algo que decir sobre sustentabilidad] 02 Jul 2020. ArchDaily. (Trans. Johnson, Maggie) Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/941787/putucos-what-a-indigenous-technique-can-tell-us-about-sustainability> ISSN 0719-8884

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