Thus, it appears that this site served as a storage facility constructed of wattle and daub.
One thousand three hundred and seventy-eight houses, including 384 of wattle and daub, were destroyed, and 2,506 were damaged.
One difficulty is that if a bit of plaster falls off, water is liable to get on to the wattle and daub, and quickly dissolve it.
It was a single storey building, half-timbered with wattle and daub.
Homes were built from wattle and daub, with thatched roofs.
Wattle and daub has been used for at least 6,000 years, and is still an important construction material in many parts of the world.
Very few 19th-century houses of wattle and daub or split timber have survived.
In others, they were built of timber, wattle and daub, or a mix of materials.