Materials Used in Angkor-Era Temples

From Banteay Srei to Angkor Wat – The Khmer Building Palette (2025) The Khmer didn’t just build temples. They mastered three very different stones – each chosen for specific purposes – creating the most sophisticated architecture in pre-modern Southeast Asia.

MaterialAppearance & PropertiesWhere It Was QuarriedPrimary Use in TemplesFamous Examples
LateriteReddish-brown, porous, iron-richLocal – found almost everywhere in CambodiaFoundation blocks, core walls, hidden structural elementsEverywhere – the “invisible” backbone of every temple
Sandstone (Grey)Hard, fine-grained, takes detail wellPhnom Kulen (40 km from Angkor)Carved bas-reliefs, decorative elements, facing blocksAngkor Wat, Bayon, Preah Khan, Beng Mealea
Sandstone (Pink/Rose)Rare, extremely hard, rose-pink colourBanteay Srei quarry (35 km northeast of Angkor)Entire temple carved from this stone – finest detail possibleBanteay Srei (almost exclusive use)
BrickSmall, high-fired red bricksLocal clay, fired on siteEarly temples (pre-10th century), some inner sanctuariesSambor Prei Kuk, Prasat Kravan
LimestoneWhite-grey, soft when quarriedVery rare – distant quarriesMinor decorative use, plaster baseOccasional lintels or stucco work

How They Used Them Together (The Khmer “Sandwich” Technique)

  1. Laterite core – cheap, abundant, strong in compression → hidden inside walls
  2. Sandstone facing – beautiful, carvable → visible surfaces and all decoration
  3. No mortar – stones held by perfect fitting + iron cramps (now mostly rusted away → collapse)
  4. Corbelled arches – false arches made by stepping stones inward (true arches unknown)

Why Banteay Srei Is Unique

  • Built almost entirely from pink sandstone – no laterite core visible
  • Stone so hard it allowed carvings up to 5 cm deep – impossible with normal grey sandstone
  • Colour comes from iron oxide – turns deeper rose in morning light

The Quarrying & Transport

  • Sandstone blocks cut at Phnom Kulen, floated down Siem Reap River on rafts during monsoon
  • Laterite dug locally – often left rough on inside surfaces
  • Estimated 5–10 million sandstone blocks used at Angkor Wat alone

2025 Conservation Reality

  • Laterite → crumbles when exposed (biggest problem at Ta Prohm) Grey sandstone → erodes from salt crystallisation Pink sandstone → most durable – Banteay Srei still looks almost new after 1,000 years

When you touch the cool pink stone at Banteay Srei or walk the fallen grey blocks at Beng Mealea, you’re touching the exact same materials the Khmer builders chose 900–1,000 years ago. They understood their stones perfectly – which ones would last forever, which ones would carve like butter, and which ones would hold up an entire cosmic mountain made of human hands. In the end, the stones outlasted the empire. But they still remember.