Tipis - cone-shaped shelters made of wooden poles covered with animal skins.
The Navajo construct hogans out of poles and brush covered with earth.
The design is a simple structure, supported by a single central pole, covered with a cotton canvas.
Gazebos can be tent-style structures of poles covered by tensioned fabric.
Most of the stuff seemed to be poles covered in cloth.
Beginning the 18th century, Plateau peoples adopted tipis made of poles covered with animal skins or mats woven from reeds.
The roof of the dugout was made of poles, covered with willows and dirt.
Their houses were probably temporary circular shelters having a frame of light poles covered with palmetto, thatch, or grass mixed with mud.
In an interview with Chan, he discusses the stunt of sliding down the pole covered with lights.
The tribe lived in beehive-shaped houses, with pole supports, typically covered with rushes, but sometimes buffalo hides.