Flood resilient earthen construction technology: When earth meets fabric
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Abstract
Human-induced climate change is causing extreme weather patterns, increasing the power and
frequency of flooding that does not have the same impact on everyone across the globe. According
to the Global Climate Risk Index (2021), developing countries have been the most severely affected
by flooding for the last two decades. For example, floods in Mozambique and Pakistan are becoming
stronger, denser and more widespread year by year. Most of the low-income people in these countries
live in earthen houses. In Mozambique, most houses are made from wattle and daub and, in Pakistan,
cob or adobe, and all of these houses are susceptible to flooding, having been built with low-compaction.
While humanitarian agencies and respective governments have aided these flood-affected
people, their help has been limited and caused problems. In flood affected areas, most international
agencies have built houses with concrete blocks (IOM and Arup, 2017), which is an expensive building
material that most local people have never used before. Because of a limited budget, only a very
small number of people are privileged to have a concrete block house, and the vast majority end up
living in temporary tents and makeshift houses. The short-sighted approach of humanitarian agencies
has caused more environmental and social problems. Because they focused on dealing with the
most pressing issues, they failed to provide a sustainable and flood-resilient housing solution and
lacked foresight of the negative impact of their responses. In view of these limitations of humanitarian
agencies and the context of flood-prone areas, where resources are scarce (for instance, timber
for formwork) and construction budgets are very low, the author of this paper has conceived of
flood-resilient earthen construction technology that can be built with locally-available and low-cost
resources: soil and fabric.
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