I built a thatched hut with an underfloor heating system for the purpose of drying bricks, tiles and pottery faster. I built my standard small 2 x 2 m hut design first to keep the rain off the work site. Then I dug 8 meters of trench, 25 cm wide and deep, zig-zagging through the floor of the hut, while building up the sides with mud made from the excavated soil. When the tunnels were finished, flat stones were laid over the trenches and covered with mud as well to form a flat floor. A fire was lit in the lower entrance of the tunnels and the system drew the smoke through weakly. This was enhanced by building a short chimney at the back. The floor will take time to dry out slowly without cracking. When it is dry, it will be used for drying tiles, bricks and pottery made from a nearby source of clay. This underfloor heating is similar to the Korean "Ondol" or Roman "Hypocaust", both systems involving fire beneath a floor to provide warmth.