Paquime Ruins

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The Paquime ruins, located near Nuevo Casas Grandes in the state of Chihuahua, Mexico, is a archeological, sculptural and architectural wonder. Paquime emerged from shadowy origins early in the thirteenth century. It became the largest and most culturally complex settlement in northern Mexico and the southwestern United States. Much like the Hohokam to the north and west, the Paquime people began building rectangular walled surface structures next to their pithouse lodges late in the first millennium.

Rammed Earth From the University of Utah

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University of Utah architecture graduate students, under the direction of Adjunct Architecture Professor Hank Louis, built a new home for Rosie Joe and her family in Bluff, Utah, a small town located in the San Juan River Valley. The rammed earth house will be dedicated in a Navajo ceremony on Sunday, July 18, at noon. The architecture work with the American Indians in San Juan County is part of the College of Architecture + Planning’s Design Build Studio. Photo courtesy of College of Architecture + Planning. [via]