An ancient roman Villa, the farm house land permanently occupied by the servants who had charge generally of the land. The villa rustica centered on the villa itself, perhaps only seasonally occupied. The Romans used a wide variety of materials ranging from chalk and sand through to pozzolanic concrete. Debris and broken pottery would be mixed with a mortar in order to fill wall sections. Pumice stone was mixed with concrete in order to render it lighter and so on.
The villas all had holes in the roof with a pool underneath.
This hole is for sunlight and rain water to get in.
~ Purpose
Ancient Roman villas were very luxurious and they were palatial buildings. Possibly in cities such as Rome or even Pompeii though Pompeii was actually a relatively provincial town. Perhaps the right idea is to be had from some of those Roman paintings within some houses of Pompeii which depict the luxurious villas on the coast: the very same ones which writers such as Pliny the Elder and Pliny the Younger retired to frequently on the coast south of Rome and towards the bay of Naples. …show more content…
The heating system was powered by a fire that was kept lit by slaves. The fire was kept in a furnace, so that it would be easier to move the hot air through the walls and underneath the floor. Their heating system was called hypocaust. Another form of roman technology was public bathrooms. Instead of dumping out your sewage onto the street like the Greeks, the Romans made sewage systems that carried the sewage to the river. This method helped people not get sick from sewage infected water. The Romans also used aqueducts to bring fresh water to their houses, because they had no way to bring clean running water to their houses. Since some smaller towns didn’t have sewage systems, there would be sewage collectors that would collect your sewage and try to sell it farmers as