| Welcome, guest: please register or log in to your account! | About | Projects | Competitions | People | Resources |
Thu, 2008-07-03 04:27
So, I just returned from an AFH sponsored trip to Liberia to check on some things for their upcoming collaboration with UNICEF. I've uploaded a few select images on this site – check the workspace tab in the folder named Liberia. Fascinating place that I can only sum it up this way: Liberia is to Uganda as Detroit is to Bozeman, Montana. Enough said.
Sun, 2008-05-04 07:34
Not even sure what day it is let alone what week, the sun rises at seven and sets at seven 365 days a year in Uganda, a 24-hour day begins not at midnight but rather 7am which is really 1 here (with no additional designation its just 1), and ends at 7pm which again is referred to as 1. Confused? I actually have to count on my fingers when asking a driver to pick me up at a certain hour of the day, if I get it wrong its a long damn walk home. What I am certain of is the internet is back, probably temporary but nonetheless I can stop referring to it as the internot for a while.
That's it for now, look for new pics in the slide show this week. Sun, 2008-03-23 01:57
GHI Pilot Questionnaire
Fri, 2008-03-21 05:07
Yeehaw! Finally poured some concrete on Wednesday. Been delayed for several days due to some wicked storms that have passed through the valley. It felt a bit like building in Detroit actually - minus the stray gunfire and crooked city officials - because nothing can be stored at the site I hurriedly spent the first couple hours cutting and placing re-bar, plastic, reestablishing some form-work, and best of all making unavailable 8” anchor bolts from available 4” lag bolts. No Detroit Ready-Mix this time though, just four dudes that don't speak English, a couple of shovels and a very patient (at times) Muzungu running the show. But we pulled it off quite well I think, took about three hours, once all the prep was complete, to mix and place 1 yard of concrete to serve as the cover/floor of our first “long drop” privy. Additionally, I learned this week that I was mistaken in my assumption that a composting privy would be culturally inappropriate in Uganda and that they do actually exist here locally. So, while they probably won't be constructed until late this summer, design for two composting privies that will serve the students has already begun – very exciting, I think.
Fri, 2008-03-14 05:02
Spent the weekend designing a privy to be located on the second terrace somewhat behind what will be the kitchen house. Simple, replicable, cheap and yet improved, I hope. Currently, a local contractor is building a 'two-holer' of a similar size at the temporary Kutamba site which I visited on Saturday to see how its done here. Pretty basic I guess: 30' deep hole in the ground 4' x 5' in plan, a concrete slab with two 6”x9” holes, brick perimeter and dividing walls (stuccoed), gabled 2x4 rafters, a corrugated roof, a vent pipe that doesn't draft and loads of stank and flies.
Tue, 2008-02-26 10:06
A critical aspect of the design of Kutamba is its ability to be replicated in other parts of Uganda without the services of an architect – this is a point stressed by the foundation and its funders. The site is less than ideal for the development of such a model and under normal circumstances would call for strict specificity, a one-off design. However, given the program parameter's I have decided to approach the design through a series of repeatable modular structures each housing two classrooms, expandable to three if necessary. A floor plan of the initial module will be posted in the file set named schematic drawings for review and critique. Below is a list of factors that led to the design of the floorplan – much of the criteria came from studying the existing conditions at the Nyaka School (the predecessor to the Kutamba school founded in 2003).
importance of natural ventilation and light.
Tue, 2008-02-26 09:56
Excavation of the Site:
Please note: This information is subject to our Terms of Use, including a specific disclaimer. It may also be subject to a Creative Commons license that you should read and understand before making use of information you find here or posting to this area.
Who's onlineThere are currently 1 user and 5200 guests online.
Online users
|
|||||||||||||||||
|
|
|||||||||||||||||
That's it. My six month sojourn to Western Uganda is over. I'm back on the east coast preparing for the fall semester at RISD and learning to deal with the anxieties of reintegration into the absurdity so poignantly referred to as Blubberland (America).
When I left, the first classroom block was nearly complete with the exception of some interior plastering and the installation of the remaining doors and windows. Bernard's crew was beginning work on the roof trusses for the kitchen house and Mathias was working to finish the staff latrine. Edison's crew had already begun digging the foundation for the second classroom block and Headmaster Eric was making plans for a road extension capable of carrying materials to a piece of recently acquired land. And though I would have liked to see more of the project complete, I'm happy with the results so far and supremely confident that we will have a functioning school ready to accept students by the beginning of the next school year in January 2009. Enjoy the new pics.
For more detailed information on the Kutamba school please feel free to e-mail me at: matt@architectureforhumanity.org. I'm happy to discuss the building process, the experience or just rap about Uganda but please be specific. Cheers.