Latest videos

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
8 Views · 4 years ago

Bamboo: an undeveloped resource and Africa's green gold.

Experts from Ethiopia on why the country needs to do more to develop this valuable giant grass. Fast-growing, sustainable and versatile, this incredible plant has a lot to offer the country.

This video was produced by Asehnafi Lakew Manila and INBAR's East Africa Regional Office.

The International Bamboo and Rattan Organisation, or INBAR, is an intergovernmental organisation dedicated to promoting the use of bamboo and rattan for inclusive, green development. We research and strengthen the global knowledge base for bamboo and rattan and raise awareness of their use for:

♣Climate Change Adaptation and Mitigation
♣Land Restoration
♣Poverty Alleviation
♣South-South Cooperation
♣Sustainable, Affordable Construction
♣Accessible, Green Energy.

INBAR Official:

www.inbar.int
www.twitter.com/INBARofficial/
www.twitter.com/INBARlac/
www.twitter.com/INBARwaro/
www.facebook.com/INBARofficial/
www.facebook.com/INBARlac/
www.facebook.com/INBARwaro/

Follow our Youtube channel for practical tips for growing, processing and marketing bamboo and rattan products as well as interviews, speeches and more from our work around the world.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
9 Views · 4 years ago

Our third session, held on 16th December, was dedicated to two speakers, Andy Horn and Eckardt Dauck, who introduced us to two very different ways of building with straw.

Andy Horn who is a South African Architect and Principal of Eco Design Architects with over 24 years of experience demystified the notion of building with straw bales. He also showcased previously completed projects, shared his experiences and findings as well as the various experimentations his firm has done with the material.

We were also delighted about the presence of the founder of Zero Carbon Designs, Eckardt Dauck, who presented to us his made-in-Uganda Zero Carbon straw panel, and how it is being used in construction throughout East Africa.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
6 Views · 4 years ago

The modern problem of deforestation in Sub-Saharan Africa has created a housing crisis. So Association la Voûte Nubienne looked 3,500 years into the past and used an architectural solution to create a home that people are proud to live in. via Dezeen & the Future Makers Series.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
67 Views · 4 years ago

Nowadays, because of climate change and deforestation, there's not enough locally available construction timber in the Sahel region of Africa. Traditional roofs are often replaced by imported corrugated zinc sheets and sawn timber frames - an expensive and climatically inappropriate solution. But with the Nubian Vault technique, using raw earth as the principal construction material, a building can go up without using timber Such buildings are well adapted to both rural and urban contexts.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
20 Views · 4 years ago

Between 2014 and 2017, AVN was instrumental in the construction
of the very first village built entirely of Nubian Vaults, implemented
by the NGOs Banlieues du Monde and Le Partenariat, and funded by the Dubai Charity Association.

Located in Mauritania, practically on the frontier formed by the river Senegal, the Sheikh Zayed Village of Diakré is made up of 51 private houses, a mosque, a literacy centre, and a maternity clinic. The beneficiaries of the project are Mauritanian refugees who fled their country during the war.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
5 Views · 4 years ago

AVN présente les solutions qu'offre son programme en terme de bâtiments communautaires mais également en terme d'assistance technique pour la construction.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
80 Views · 4 years ago

Construire des maisons sans bois ni tôles au Sahel ? Un pari fou relevé depuis plus d'une décennie et gagné par un maçon de la région de Montpellier, Thomas Granier. Le secret, c'est la Voûte nubienne, un procédé architectural antique, venu du haut Nil il y a plus de 3000 ans, inconnu en Afrique de l'Ouest.

Depuis plus de dix ans, l'association La Voûte nubienne (www.lavoutenubienne.org) a adapté, simplifié et codifié cette technique ancestrale qui permet de construire avec un outillage basique, des matériaux locaux et des compétences techniques simples des habitations aux toitures voûtées restaurant la possibilité du toit terrasse.

Un programme de vulgarisation et de formation à grande échelle « pour des Toits de Terre au Sahel » a été lancé dans sept pays afin de propager ce modèle à l'ensemble de l'Afrique sahélienne qui manque cruellement de bois et utilise de la tôle importée.

Ces images sont extraites du film « le salaire de l'espoir » de l'excellente série « Artisans du changement » produite par Lato Sensu Productions (www.artisansduchangement.tv / www.latosensu.tv) et diffusée sur Ushuaïa TV et TV5 Monde.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
22 Views · 4 years ago

La construction en terre... pour construire la terre ! Tel est le crédo de l'entreprise solidaire CoMaLoC de Dassa (Bénin), accompagnée par SENS depuis 2010. Grâce à la formation animée par CRAterre au Bénin en novembre 2011, de nombreux autres acteurs sont en train de s'associer à la démarcher pour (re)valoriser le construction en terre.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
11 Views · 4 years ago

In this movie, Thomas Granier explains why his organisation La Voûte Nubienne believes the future of housing in Africa can be transformed by reviving a 3,500-year-old building technique.

Ambakisye-Okang Dukuzumurenyi
7 Views · 4 years ago

⁣Boda Boda riders SHOCK the world after building an estate worth 95M from 50ksh daily saving.




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