Tadelakt

A tadelakt-covered wall
Modern bath, sinks, and walls made of tadelakt
Walls and fountain in the Hammam Vakil, apparently made of tadelakt

Tadelakt (tadla:kt) is a waterproof plaster surface used to make baths, sinks, water vessels, interior and exterior walls, ceilings, roofs, and even floors. It is made from lime plaster, which is rammed, polished, and treated with soap to make it waterproof and water-repellant.[1] Tadelakt is labour-intensive to install, but durable.[2] Since it is applied as a paste, tadelakt has a soft, undulating character, it can form curves, and it is seamless. Pigment can be added to give it any colour, but deep red is traditional.[3] It may have a shiny or matte finish.

Etymology and history

"Tadelakt" means "to rub in", from the Arabic (or Amazigh/Berber?) تدلاكت, referring to the rubbing with soap.[3]

Tadelakt is thought to have evolved from qadad, a similar plaster treated with calcium hydroxide and oils and fats instead of soaps.[2]

Constituents and chemistry

The basic constituents of tadelakt plaster are:

  1. lime plaster (not Portland cement)
  2. in some cases, marble or limestone sand (but not other aggregates)
  3. natural soap (often "black" or olive oil soap) to speed carbonation of the surface and impart water-resistance.

The soap chemically reacts with the lime plaster, forming lime (calcium) soaps. Calcium soaps are insoluble in water,[4] and fairly hard.[3] They are familiar, in areas with calcium-rich ("hard") water, as deposits in bathtubs, sinks, and showers; when soap is mixed with the water's dissolved calcium carbonate/lime, calcium soaps form.

2 C17H35COONa+ + Ca2+ → (C17H35COO)2Ca + 2 Na+

Techniques

Mixing plaster powder with water and yellow pigment to make Tadelakt in Riad Dar Rita, Ouarzazate, Morocco.
Tadelakt carving in a riad in Marrakesh, Morocco. [5]

Traditional application includes polishing with a river stone and treatment with oleic acid, in the form of olive oil soap, to lend it its final appearance and water resistance.

In Morocco, the traditional application technique:

Long-term maintenance of tadlakt requires regularly re-sealing the surface with a soap solution;[3] in the case of qadad rooves, this was traditionally done every few years.[2]

Tadelakt can be elaborately carved into yeseria.

Uses

Sculpted surface, probably tadelakt, in a hammam (bath) in the Amer Fort, India

Tadelakt is the traditional coating of the palaces, hammams and bathrooms of the riads in Morocco.[6] The restoration of the riads of Morocco had led to a resurgence in its use.

In modern times, it has been used outside. [7]

See also

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tadelakt.

References

  1. doi:10.4028/www.scientific.net/AMR.688.60
  2. 1 2 3 Anita Sutter, « Note sur la fabrication du qadâd », Chroniques yéménites [En ligne], 6-7 | 1999, mis en ligne le 18 décembre 2006, consulté le 13 février 2016. URL : http://cy.revues.org/111
  3. 1 2 3 4 http://tadelakt.co.uk/what-is-tadelakt-2/
  4. doi:10.1007/BF01312564
  5. http://www.laksiba.com/about-riad-laksiba/4553124575
  6. doi:10.4028/www.scientific.net/AMR.923.174 |url:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/271999881_Hydrophobized_Lime_Plasters_as_Protective_Surface_in_Wet_Rooms_in_Monument_Preservation
  7. http://authenticplasterfx.com/exterior-vancouver-tadelakt-plaster-project-complete/ Exterior Tadelakt]


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/22/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.