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Attitudes towards earth building for Zambian housing provision

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posted on 2008-10-23, 08:00 authored by Karim Hadjri, Mohamed OsmaniMohamed Osmani, Bousmaha Baiche, Charles Chifunda
Zambian cities are experiencing a massive influx of people from rural areas resulting in high demand for housing and the growth of squatter settlements. Insufficient use of low-cost traditional construction techniques in the Zambian residential construction industry has resulted in expensive housing stock for the majority of the poor. There is therefore an urgent need to assess alternative building materials and techniques that are both affordable and sustainable. This research examines the viability of earth as a building material and associated construction techniques for urban housing provision in Zambia. Attitudes towards earth building among end-users, designers, contractors and government regulators were assessed using quantitative and qualitative research approaches. The study concludes that urban residents associate earth houses with poverty and low socio-cultural status; construction professionals are reluctant to specify and select earth materials due to their technical and performance limitations; and government regulators acknowledged that there are currently no appropriate earth building standards and codes in place. Nevertheless, Zambian designers and contractors expressed their willingness to use the material if its performance is improved. Furthermore, government reported that new codes of practice and standards could be developed if stimulated by research findings.

History

School

  • Architecture, Building and Civil Engineering

Citation

HADJRI, K. ... et al, 2007. Attitudes towards earth building for Zambian housing provision. Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers : Engineering Sustainability, 160 (3), pp.141–149

Publisher

© Thomas Telford Publishing

Publication date

2007

Notes

This article was published in the journal, Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, Engineering Sustainability [© Thomas Telford Publishing] and is also available at: http://www.thomastelford.com/journals/

ISSN

1478-4629;1751-7680

Language

  • en

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