A windcatcher is a traditional architectural element used to create natural ventilation and passive cooling in buildings. Windcatchers come in various designs: unidirectional, bidirectional, and multidirectional. Windcatchers are widely used in Iran, North Africa and in the West Asian countries around the Persian Gulf, and have been for the past three thousand years.
Sadly neglected by modern architects in the latter half of the 20th century, the early 21st century saw them used again, to increase ventilation and cut power demand for air-conditioning. Generally, the cost of construction for a windcatcher-ventilated building is less than that of a similar building with conventional heating, ventilation, and air conditioning (HVAC) systems. The maintenance costs are also lower. Unlike powered air-conditioning and fans, windcatchers are silent and continue to function when the electrical grid power fails (a particular concern in places where grid power is unreliable and expensive, such as India and California).
Windcatchers rely on local weather and microclimate conditions, and not all techniques will work everywhere; local factors must be taken into account in design.
In Iran, a windcatcher is called a bâdgir: bâd "wind" + gir "catcher". The devices were used in Achaemenid architecture. In Iran, they are used in the hot, dry areas of the Central Plateau, and in the hot, humid coastal regions.
Central Iran shows large diurnal temperature variation with an arid climate. Most buildings are constructed from thick ceramic with high insulation values. Towns centered on desert oases tend to be packed very closely together with high walls and ceilings, maximizing shade at ground level. The heat of direct sunlight is minimized with small windows that face away from the sun.
The windcatcher's effectiveness had led to its routine use as a refrigerating device in Iran. Many traditional water reservoirs (ab anbars), which are capable of storing water at near freezing temperatures during summer months, are built with windcatchers. The evaporative cooling effect is strongest in the driest climates, such as on the Iranian plateau, leading to the ubiquitous use of windcatchers in drier areas such as Yazd, Kerman, Kashan, Sirjan, Nain, and Bam.
Windcatchers tend to have one, four, or eight openings. In the city of Yazd, all windcatchers are four- or eight-sided. The construction of a windcatcher depends on the direction of airflow at that specific location: if the wind tends to blow from only one side, it is built with only one downwind opening. This is the style most commonly seen in Meybod, 50 kilometers from Yazd: the windcatchers are short and have a single opening. Windcatchers in Iran may be quite elaborate, due to their use as status symbols.
https://hexbear.net/post/158599 check out this mega about a fellow comrades new game they made themselves and give it support
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Feeling sad from my cat dying today :sadness-abysmal:
But... I've been thinking I'll adopt a stray cat from a shelter to fill that void, they need love, and I'm happy to care for them :meow-hug:
Sorry to hear about your kitty Maurice, hope you're doing okay :stalin-heart:
Oh, also I always watch Spongebob BC (Before Comedy) when a pet died. It aired the night I lost my first kitty and it was exactly what the family needed at the time in it's weird way
They missed the chance to make a crab pun, Before Crab :sicko-crab:
Sorry about your cat man. A shelter cat is a good idea. My family pet growing up was a cat we got from a shelter and he was the best pet we ever had.
Deeply sorry for your loss Maurice, losing a pet is incredibly hard. I wish only the best for your recovery.
Bad News: i exist outside my own perception :markkks-juggalo:
and there's a part of you that doesn't exist in any perception, but is still "there". good luck.
Whenever I accidentally read more about NFTs/Metaverse/ect I feel like someone is fucking with me. Can't believe this shit is real lol
Might have COVID, comrades. I don't remember the last time I was this sick even before the pandemic. I had to have my peepaw dr*ve me to the hospital for my test because of the dizziness. I'm not in peril though. Honestly I just caught the bug so I could be ill at time as shoe0nhead as a form of parasocial relationship-ing.
Also not directly related, but always relevant: I hate America
God it's just so weird, I flip flop between resenting mom for passing and leaving me alone and with my shithead father and then I terribly miss her. I've done a lot of thinking in the past couple of days: as close as mom and I were, there was a bit of a co-dependency going on. We had a healthy relationship and we didn't at the same time, there were toxic elements, both of us engaged in. :sadness: it's sobering and it makes me sad.
Dude in the gym is wearing a thin blue line flag beanie right now. Very cool how you can just openly be a Nazi and that's totally acceptable
People hate Cuba but literally don't know Batista existed.
They hate the Reds but don't know the whites existed. Or, in any meaningful sense, the Nazis.
They don't know what the French and South Vietnamese government did in Vietnam.
And on and on and on.
Some know the Nazis existed they just thought they were BASED
same with Batista et al.
Bleh, you ever feel bored and anxious at the same time? That's a weird feeling.
Isn't that... isn't that just the baseline state?
...It's not??
:deeper-sadness:
seeing people vent on here is infinitely more relatable than irl and definitely makes me feel less lonely
I’ve used this spot to vent about my biological parents and their behavior before. Its fine to express your frustrations and your pain in a healthy manner by talking about it.
I live in the suburbs and have a shitty truck. My neighbors keep calling the cops on me for parking in front of my own driveway
I'll try to take care, thanks for your kind words
The media wanting to keep people calm is having the opposite effect on me. It comes across as uncanny and eerie to me.
Like holy shit why are you smiling the world is on fire