The Aga
Khan Award for Architecture 2004
The Ninth
Award Cycle, 2002-2004
Sandbag Shelter Prototypes, various locations
| Timetable: |
First development,
1992 |
| Architect: |
Cal-Earth
Institute, Nader Khalili, US |
Description
The global need for housing includes millions
refugees and displaced persons – victims
of natural disasters and wars. Iranian architect
Nader Khalili believes that this need can be addressed
only by using the potential of earth construction.
After extensive research into vernacular earth
building methods in Iran, followed by detailed
prototyping, he has developed the sandbag or ‘superadobe’
system. The basic construction technique involves
filling sandbags with earth and laying them in
courses in a circular plan. The circular courses
are corbelled near the top to form a dome. Barbed
wire is laid between courses to prevent the sandbags
from shifting and to provide earthquake resistance.
Hence the materials of war – sandbags and
barbed wire – are used for peaceful ends,
integrating traditional earth architecture with
contemporary global safety requirements.
The system employs the timeless forms of arches,
domes and vaults to create single and double-curvature
shell structures that are both strong and aesthetically
pleasing. While these load-bearing or compression
forms refer to the ancient mudbrick architecture
of the Middle East, the use of barbed wire as
a tensile element alludes to the portable tensile
structures of nomadic cultures. The result is
an extremely safe structure. The addition of barbed
wire to the compression structures creates earthquake
resistance; the aerodynamic form resists hurricanes;
the use of sandbags aids flood resistance; and
the earth itself provides insulation and fireproofing.
Several design prototypes of domes and vaults
were built and tested. The system is particularly
suitable for providing temporary shelter because
it is cheap and allows buildings to be quickly
erected by hand by the occupants themselves with
a minimum of training. The shelters focus on the
economic empowerment of people by participation
in the creation of their own homes and communities.
Each shelter comprises one major domed space with
some ancillary spaces for cooking and sanitary
services. Incremental additions such as ovens
and animal shelters can also be made to provide
a more permanent status and the technology can
also be used for both buildings and infrastructure
such as roads, kerbs, retaining walls and landscaping
elements.
Because the structures use local resources –
on-site earth and human hands – they are
entirely sustainable. Men and women, old and young,
can build since the maximum weight lifted is an
earth-filled can to pour into the bags. Barbed
wire and sandbags are supplied locally, and the
stabilizer is also usually locally sourced.
Since 1982, Nader Khalili has developed and tested
the Superadobe prototype in California. In 1991
he founded the California Institute of Earth Art
and Architecture (Cal-Earth), a non-profit research
and educational organization that covers everything
from construction on the moon and on Mars to housing
design and development for the world’s homeless
for the United Nations. Cal-Earth has focused
on researching, developing and teaching the technologies
of Superadobe. The prototypes have not only received
California building permits but have also met
the requirements of the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR) for emergency housing. Both
the UNHCR and the United Nations Development Programme
have chosen to apply the system, which they used
in 1995 to provide temporary shelters for a flood
of refugees coming into Iran from Iraq.
Khalili’s educational philosophy has also
continued to develop. A distance-teaching programme
is being tested for the live broadcast of hands-on
instruction directly from Cal-Earth. Many individuals
have been trained at Cal-Earth to build with these
techniques and are carrying this knowledge to
those in need in many countries of the world,
from Mongolia to Mexico, India to the United States,
and Iran, Brazil, Siberia, Chile and South Africa.
Jury Citation
These
shelters serve as a prototype for temporary housing
using extremely inexpensive means to provide safe
homes that can be built quickly and have the high
insulation values necessary in arid climates.
Their curved form was devised in response to seismic
conditions, ingeniously using sand or earth as
raw materials, since their flexibility allows
the construction of single- and double-curvature
compression shells that can withstand lateral
seismic forces.
The prototype is a symbiosis of tradition
and technology. It employs vernacular forms, integrating
load-bearing and tensile structures, but provides
a remarkable degree of strength and durability
for this type of construction, which is traditionally
weak and fragile, through a composite system of
sandbags and barbed wire. Created by packing local
earth into bags, which are then stacked vertically,
the structures are not external systems applied
to a territory, but instead grow out of their
context, recycling available resources for the
provision of housing. The sustainability of this
approach is further strengthened because the construction
of the sandbag shelters does not require external
intervention but can be built by the occupants
themselves with minimal training. The system is
also highly flexible: the scale of structures
and arrangement of clusters can be varied and
applied to different ecosystems to produce settlements
that are suitable for different numbers of individuals
or groups with differing social needs. Due to
their strength, the shelters can also be made
into permanent housing, transforming the outcome
of natural disasters into new opportunities.
Project
Data
| Architect |
Cal-Earth Institute, US: Nader Khalili,
concept and design;
Iliona Outram, Project Manager |
| Consultants |
P. J. Vittore Ltd, US, and C. W. Howe Associates,
US, structural engineers |
| Sponsors and clients |
Sponsors
and clients National Endowment for the Arts,
US; Southern California Institute of Architecture
(Sci Arc), US; the Ted Turner Foundation,
US; United Nations Development Programme (UNDP),
US and Switzerland; United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR), Iran offices; the Bureau
for Alien and Foreign Immigrant Affairs (BAFIA),
Iran; Laura Huxley's Our Ultimate Investment
Foundation, US; the Rex Foundation, US; Kit
Tremaine, US; the Leventis Foundation, Cyprus;
the Flora Family Foundation, US.
|
| Prototypes built to
date |
by Hamid Irani and Iraqi refugees at Baninajar
Camp, Iran; Eric Hansen, Mexico; Djalal and
Shahla Sherafat, Canada; Michelle Queyroy
and orphans at the MEG Foundation, India;
Dada Krpasundarananda, India, Thailand and
Siberia; Mara Cranic, Baja, Mexico; Virginia
Sanchis, Brasil; Patricio Calderon, Chile;
Jim Guerra and Mexican farmworkers, US; Don
Graber, Craig Cranic, Giovanni Panza and Yacqui
People of Sarmiento, Mexico
|
| Timetable |
Sandbag Shelter Prototypes (Superadobe):
first development, 1992 |
Project
Photography
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