
Andres Viglucci, writing for the Miami Herald, describes how a Miami company has launched an effort to provide Haitians left homeless by the quake with simple, inexpensive cabins made of sturdy space-age materials and designed by a famed Miami architect. Here are some excerpts, with a link to the full article below.
Efficient, inexpensive and nearly indestructible, the little blue-and-aqua hut sitting in the parking lot of a North Miami-Dade factory represents cutting-edge building technology — and many like it could soon could be headed to Haiti. The company that made the prototype house and the space-age composite panels it is built from announced Wednesday that it will donate 1,000 of the cabins to people left homeless by the Haiti earthquake. At a news conference attended by some high-profile backers, including retired U.S. Army Gen. Wesley Clark and retired Miami Heat star Alonzo Mourning, InnoVida Holdings officials also said they have lined up $15 million in investment capital to build a factory in Haiti that could produce 10,000 houses a year. “It can do more for housing in Haiti better and faster than any other technology out there,” said Clark, who is on InnoVida’s board of directors.
It’s not yet a done deal. InnoVida officials say they must still ascertain who will receive the 1,000 homes, which can serve as temporary shelter but were designed by renowned Miami architect and planner Andrés Duany as permanent housing. The company is in talks with the Haitian government and several interested volunteer organizations working on quake relief. In attendance Wednesday was Haiti’s minister of tourism, Patrick Delatour, an architect and urban planner in charge of developing the government’s reconstruction strategy. He was noncommittal, though he said he liked the InnoVida material and two prototype homes at the factory, one a full-scale house designed for Miami’s Little Haiti. “The bottom line is, who will pay? And that we will know March 31” he said, referring to an international donors conference on Haiti set for that date. “I heard of this and I came to take a look. It’s a very nice design.”
. . . 
The Haitian Cabin, as it’s been dubbed, is a refined version of a stripped-down house that Duany proposed a couple of weeks after the quake. This version, which like the first would sleep eight in a bunkhouse-like arrangement, incorporates improvements Duany made based on research in Haiti and consultations with sociologists and anthropologists. Instead of the first version’s open, screened-in sides, this one has solid walls all around and windows with wooden shutters. It even has indoor plumbing — a faucet connected to a pair of tanks on the roof, one to collect rain and the other potable water. Duany said he took as much care designing the simple hut as he does designing homes for affluent clients.
Duany also developed an elaborate plan showing how the modular houses, with variations to fit rural, suburban and urban environments and different topographies, could be easily expanded with additional rooms — and how new rural villages, urban neighborhoods and suburbs could be erected using the cabin in various configurations.
The panels are fully insulated, lightweight and fireproof, and the assembled structures would stand up to a strong quake and has passed testing for a Category 5 hurricane, Duany said.
Foundations could be sunk in concrete or, because cement and rebar may be unavailable, screwed deep into the ground using a method developed by a European company, he said.
Because water for flushing wastes would likely be unavailable in most places and latrines impractical given the probable density of settlements, most Haitian Cabin dwellers would have to use other means of waste disposal. Duany proposes use of the Peepoo bag, a product developed in Sweden that contains chemicals that rapidly compost human waste.
For the full article go to
http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/02/24/1498903/low-cost-cabins-offered-for-post.html?story_link=email_msg
This is a wonderful idea-much better than tents. We are associted with the Little Brothers and sisters of the Incarnation who are accepting refugees from PAP to their compound in the central plateau area near Pandiassou. They certainly could use something like this.
By: Sr Marilyn Welch on March 1, 2010
at 9:59 am
Haiti was a Trending Topic all day today on Twitter http://bit.ly/9VyHxC
By: Andrew Sansone on March 1, 2010
at 10:27 pm
[...] commenta notizie dal mondo caraibico, riprende un articolo del Miami Herald di Andres Viglucci, che presenta un nuovo progetto a basso costo per fornire piccole residenze temporanee alle persone rimaste senza casa ad Haiti. La particolarità [...]
By: Alaska» Blog Archive » terra tremante on March 2, 2010
at 7:02 am
Here is a low cost system that they could do with a very low skill level. Under $100 to build a basic 14×20′ structure and it can be upgraded to a permanent building:
https://docs.google.com/fileview?id=0B1L6yHkghAxFNjFiN2MxOWQtMWZiYi00Y2RkLWIyNTktOGFlMTlhODJiZjMx&hl=en
Plywood is obscenely priced in Haiti.
By: Peter on March 3, 2010
at 12:16 pm
As the world is watching my country plunging to a dead end ,never realize Haitian people need to reform they way of living Economically and politically .
the thinking of Low-cost cabins is OK But who’s going to protect those people ,when a rapist get to they house in demand a son to rape is mother.Giving is OK but the mentality have to change.
RtheL
By: Viennchy on June 9, 2010
at 2:18 am