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Earth materials in urban environments - toward building continuity with the past

This dissertation looks at redesigning urban infill to promote a decolonial and environmentally sensitive city that is connected to its history, people, and nature. The inquiry is sparked by experiments in making Compressed Earth Blocks, mud and straw bricks, and shell-crete, and explores the potent...

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Main Author: Thomas, Katherine
Other Authors: Papanicolaou, Stiliani
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Thomas, Katherine
author2 Papanicolaou, Stiliani
author_browse Papanicolaou, Stiliani
Thomas, Katherine
author_facet Papanicolaou, Stiliani
Thomas, Katherine
author_sort Thomas, Katherine
collection Thesis
description This dissertation looks at redesigning urban infill to promote a decolonial and environmentally sensitive city that is connected to its history, people, and nature. The inquiry is sparked by experiments in making Compressed Earth Blocks, mud and straw bricks, and shell-crete, and explores the potential of building with locally sourced, earth-based materials in an urban context. Theoretical explorations focus on decoloniality and the relationship between materials and colonisation, natural systems and urban-nature divides, and appropriate technologies and their potential to empower community at the human scale. These theory and technology studies inform the design of an urban infill building in the East City in Cape Town. On the corner of Harrington and Albertus Street, the site is a recently demolished Victorian warehouse building that was destroyed in a fire in 2020. What remains on the site is a 1940's attachment to the original building, a narrow but deep concrete framed sliver of a warehouse. The design uses this structure as an armature to support a set of infill buildings that explore the benefit of narrow typologies in encouraging low rise density in cities. The architecture is made with lightweight timber and steel structures that help support multistorey earth walls. Concrete- and carbon-heavy architecture is questioned and juxtaposed with hybrid tectonics, taking lessons from history to design congruous urban futures.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:27.383Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics
publisherStr School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38187 Earth materials in urban environments - toward building continuity with the past Thomas, Katherine Papanicolaou, Stiliani Architecture This dissertation looks at redesigning urban infill to promote a decolonial and environmentally sensitive city that is connected to its history, people, and nature. The inquiry is sparked by experiments in making Compressed Earth Blocks, mud and straw bricks, and shell-crete, and explores the potential of building with locally sourced, earth-based materials in an urban context. Theoretical explorations focus on decoloniality and the relationship between materials and colonisation, natural systems and urban-nature divides, and appropriate technologies and their potential to empower community at the human scale. These theory and technology studies inform the design of an urban infill building in the East City in Cape Town. On the corner of Harrington and Albertus Street, the site is a recently demolished Victorian warehouse building that was destroyed in a fire in 2020. What remains on the site is a 1940's attachment to the original building, a narrow but deep concrete framed sliver of a warehouse. The design uses this structure as an armature to support a set of infill buildings that explore the benefit of narrow typologies in encouraging low rise density in cities. The architecture is made with lightweight timber and steel structures that help support multistorey earth walls. Concrete- and carbon-heavy architecture is questioned and juxtaposed with hybrid tectonics, taking lessons from history to design congruous urban futures. 2023-07-30T08:28:58Z 2023-07-30T08:28:58Z 2023 2023-07-30T08:28:09Z Master Thesis Masters Master of Architecture (Professional) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38187 eng application/pdf School of Architecture, Planning and Geomatics Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
spellingShingle Architecture
Thomas, Katherine
Earth materials in urban environments - toward building continuity with the past
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Earth materials in urban environments - toward building continuity with the past
title_full Earth materials in urban environments - toward building continuity with the past
title_fullStr Earth materials in urban environments - toward building continuity with the past
title_full_unstemmed Earth materials in urban environments - toward building continuity with the past
title_short Earth materials in urban environments - toward building continuity with the past
title_sort earth materials in urban environments toward building continuity with the past
topic Architecture
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38187
work_keys_str_mv AT thomaskatherine earthmaterialsinurbanenvironmentstowardbuildingcontinuitywiththepast