Dwarven House

The Dwarven House is the main habitation building of the Dwarves. These underground houses hidden in the mountains with a dwarven door as entrance. Thus it it easier to find at night.

The houses can be seen as an dwarven equivalent to Hobbit Holes; a standalone building with one pair of inhabitants and nothing really valueable (no Traders).

Blue Mountains House
The Blue Mountains House is a variation of the normal Dwarven House for the Dwarves of the Blue Mountains. It is nearly the same but uses Sarlluin materials instead of dwarven stone at many places.

As being nearly the same, there won't be an extra page for the Blue Mountains House.

Occurence
The house is hidden in the mountain sides and the door looks like stone at the day, so it can be hard to spot a house, but the door often has a small tunnel with a width of three blocks in front which helps to spot an entrance.

With an minimap-mod (with radar function) installed, you know where the houses are, if you see two dwarves next to each other.

Appearance
The house consists of three rooms: The mainroom in the ground floor and a kitchen and a sleeping room below.

The main room has a table with food and two stairways to the left and the right. Left it goes down to the sleeping room with two dwarven beds. The right stair leads to the kitchen/crafting room. This room features a chest with food, two barrels with dwarven ale or dwarven tonic, a dwarven crafting table and two dwarven forges.

The walls are made out of dwarven bricks (and sarlluin bricks for Blue Mountains Houses), spruce wood and stairs from these materials. The floor can have carpets. The house is lightened through dwarven chandeliers.

Inhabitants
Only two NPCs live here: a Dwarf and a dwarven woman. They seem to be married together.

Bugs
Sometimes the house will not spawn completely underground and a border of the grass roof will come to sight. This will not be a problem in the grassy Iron Hills, but in the Blue Mountains it can cause grass come through the Sarlluin and snow layers.