Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Guesthouse & Waterless Toilet & Creativity Series

We had our first occupants stay in our guesthouse this past weekend. Kannan Narayanswamy, his wife Uma Iyer, and their daughter Navya enjoyed several nights inside the bamboo house. The first pilot family to enjoy a nights sleep welcomed this new building material, because of it's aesthetic quality, as well their passion for sustainable building materials for India. The nights were cold, compared to the average overnight temp for this region, and problems of cold drafts, and heat loss were noticed. Several factors are still to be addressed, and as we develop the prototype house for rural Indian citizens, we will build on past trial and errors.





















Our waterless toilet design has come out well, and with the

help of Kannan Narayanswamy we have created a solution to the waste water produced my modern toilet designs. This will be part of a package that will include our rural housing design. We are building on site here, and it will be used by the artisans and visiting guests.










The foundation for the waterless toilet is three feet tall, and that will give us enough volume to house the human waste that will a crew in 6 months. Our design has two chambers, and each one will be used for 6 months and when one is full the other will be used. This allows for decomposition of waste, as well as a safe way for waste to be broken down. There will not be any urine or wash water mixed in with the solid waste. This helps in decomposition and bacterial build up. Once the chambers are full, is the responsibility of the user to empty each chamber, and mix it with compost to add to the nutrients of surrounding soil. We plan on having a green roof, therefore we will be using the solid matter for compost, and urine mixed with water to keep the plants healthy.






As the diagram displays above, the person will sit ground level and defecate in the brown hole, and urinate in the yellow rectangle. The separation of urine and feces, improves breakdown of solid matter, as well decreases the use of water. There is one wash basin for the user to wash themselves after doing their business. There is also a wash room to the left.


We have started to coordinate our first discussion series here at Wondergrass to encourage people of all ages, talents, and fields to share their passion and connection to the ability to create. This gift given to all of us, has many outlets, bamboo design, music, visual arts, and so many more. We have started to distribute to local colleges these fliers to let people know that there is a place to welcome all of those outlets. If you are in the area, please contact us, and we would be most welcoming.

Sunday, December 20, 2009

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Progress on Staircase

Our staircase to the apartment in the guesthouse is getting it's final touches done on it. Our inventory of bamboo consists of 2" to 3" diameter stocks of bamboo. Therefore we designed the staircase structure as a truss, and extended the webbing beyond the supports to form the treads and risers. We made a sample of this design several weeks ago, and it had three treads. To increase the strength we added more diagonal crossing to distribute the load for the people walking on the stairs.




Artistic expression through bamboo


















Our guesthouse is now having it's final touches done on it. We started to expand on bamboo's tensile strength. Some of our window frames needed some innovation, so we took small slats of bamboo and bent them in wooden frames, resembling 3-d grids that extend inwards and outwards. We have been having fun at the many things that are allowed by bamboo's amazing flexibility.

































Sunday, December 13, 2009

Waterless Toilet & Outreach & R+D

We had another 200 students from a local elementary school come and take a tour of our guesthouse today. They were excited and liked climbing on all of the understory floor joists that resemble monkey bars. We tried to tell them as much as possible about the positive sides of building with bamboo. Hopefully, as the next generation grows up and wants to start a new family, they will look towards bamboo as a building material.







Our waterless toilet design is starting it's beginning
phases. We just starting digging for the foundation
today, and we chose a
site spot far from the work site, but near some sloped ground to take
advantage of the slope. This design is spearheaded by one of our architects, Sayali Andhare. She has researched and studied water toilet systems extensively, and found that this is exactly what Wondergrass should be implementing along with a bamboo house.








Here we have dug for the foundation, and tomorrow we will start laying down some precast concrete panels. We have been experimenting with some panels and the best way to reinforce them. We will now try to use G I sheet, for the interior reinforcement. It is relatively cheap, and is strong laterally as a tensile memeber




Our design for the waterless toilet uses a nice water catchment
scheme, that goes well with the rainy seasons of India. It will use bamboo as the structure and roof, as well as the paneling for the four sides. While the foundation will be of cement/brick.
This is going to go really well for the area currently surrounding the village of Payt. We are trying to forecast the acceptance of this facility in Indian house holds, and we are not sure how this will be viewed. This is a healthier and smarted choice for the proper disposal of human waste.






We have also started looking our structure for the new housing prototype for the bamboo house. We thought of extending the members of the truss, and using their strength as a way to stabelize the story above the ground floor. These members would be holding the wall, and they are secured at several points other than the bases. Further research is in development.

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Outreach, workshop, and housing unit design




As part of Wondergrass's outreach program, a local elementary school of 200 students recently came to our construction site, and took a tour of our guesthouse. Grades of second to fifth, all ages seemed to be amused and excited to go inside a house that was not made of cement. These students live in villages similar to the majority of families all across India. They have below poverty level incomes, and some at middle class, and the families survive on manual labor jobs, or at best clerks or business men for local villages. The target audience for our planned rural housing initiative that is currently underway. We have completed a survey of qualitative and quantitative data that will help us with understanding the ideal Indian citizen that will benefit from a bamboo house. We have yet to publish those findings, until our urban study of similar framework is completed.

Concurrently, we are trying to introduce the urban application and finds it applicability. We came at this survey with an open mind, and structured the questioning in an objective way. This study will not only help Wondergrass, but also the vast majority of rural housing developers in India. It will also help rural industries tackle problems of poverty and where the sources are.
Apart from being extremely useful towards Wondergrass for it's use as a way to understand the housing client, but as well as future comparison studies, as to the effectiveness of building for a specific client in need, rather then the majority of rural citizens. It is a thin rope to walk across when introducing bamboo as an alternative buidling material to traditional rural families. We at Wondergrass know all about the positice attributes of bamboo as a better way of building homes for India. However, the perception of bamboo is a poor one.


The perception of bamboo across the building sectors is that of a weak material that is good for temporary structures, not ones that can last through generations. Undoubtly false, the stregnth of bamboo housing can be strong, durable, and stand the test of a growing family. Amazingly though, we have had alot of good positive feedback about our bamboo guesthouse. Though not identical to our new prototype housing unit that will be constructed this spring and summer, we are faithful in it's ability to last quite a while.


2nd Day of Artisans Workshop Underway

The second day of our workshop for artisans was a success, as well as fun. Some of our younger artisans had finally the time to sit down with some of the more experienced craftsman and learn the skills of sharpening, joinery, and producing a well made piece of artwork.
We have new artisans occasionally coming in, and to balance the talent is crucial in making a strong team of artists. Everything from sharpening to putting the last touches on the cement foundation should be understood by every craftsman at Wondergrass.


The second part of the workshop was lead my one of our architects, Sayali Andhare. An employee of Wondergrass for the past 2 months, Sayali has worked as an architect in India developing designs for cultural centers, housing, and several other sustainably developed projects.

And one of our interns from the United States was there to assist as well as learn the process of bamboo construction. We have a group
from varied backgrounds that makes for an interesting pool of
creativity.

We will be holding our next workshop in some time, and we have several speakers scheduled to give talks on architecture, bamboo as a building source, as well as other alternative resources for building etc.
We build on this to make it a larger conference on the coming years,
and we hope to have this work site as a well known resource the general knowledge of bamboo






Housing Prototype for Rural Housing Underway






Our ongoing design for out adaptable housing that will be used as a prototype for rural housing is in some interesting developments. We are designing a small unit that will be used by small families, and as the family grows, this design will be adaptable to accommodate the change. This structure will extend up and out as the family needs develop. It's in it's infancy so we have further to develop the connections, as well as the in between spaces that add up. There will be updates on our progress, and feel free to input your feedback if you know of well known flexible housing structures in the world.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Wondergrass Workshop Commencement


Wondergrass has started it's monthly 2 day workshop starting with Vaibhav Kaley, CEO of Wondergrass, as the first speaker to introduce bamboo to the artisans. Part of a Wondergrass initiative, these workshops will host guest speakers as part of a bamboo resource center for the expansion of building with bamboo in Wondergrass and India. Starting with the basics, artisans are introduced to a formal setting for proper techniques, names of tools in several languages, as well as improving drawing skills so that more craftsmans can take designs into their own hands. This is an example of self empowerment and forward linkages that Wondergrass is developing for the implementation of bamboo in India. Introducing bamboo, and then pushing for an entrepreneurship attitude for others, further extending the placement of bamboo as a building material in India. This will also give us more confidence in the final outcome of our Guesthouse that is getting completed. Since bamboo is such an adaptive materials the capabilities are beyond a novices understanding. That is why creating such workshop and educative workshops is vital in showing the varied expressions that bamboo can make. Since Wondergrass is expanding in several different areas for using bamboo, housing, auditorium, tensile structures etc. the constant learning of bamboo's properties is done by all of us, not only the artisans. We continually redesign the way modern construction methods are used, so as to adapt to the use of bamboo. For example, the typical brick and cement house used for so many rural Indian homes, has become costly, environmentally wasteful with resources, and unsafe in earthquakes.Bamboo can solve all of these problems because of it's cost effectiveness, its a renewable resource, as well as it tensile strength matching that of steel to combat earthquakes. All of these facts are going to be covered in the coming months with our workshop's that will host guest lectures. If you are interested and have experience working with bamboo, please let us know, and we would like you to share your knowledge.

In our guest house facade we have given Danesh one of our artisans the task of building shutters for the ground story. They came out very well, and reflect the care taken into making them. They will be used near the ground entry, as well being operable, they will also provide an attractive light pattern on the interior during the sunset. The lightness and aestetic qualities of bamboo are wonderful to design with. It's quite a compliment to nature and an evolultion of building to use such materials like bamboo. Not only bamboo, but we have used mud plastering to create great wall facades that will absorb the heat in the day making a cool place to be. We have a three coat process in which we apply a liberal coat of water soaked mud, and let that dry. After that we apply a second coat on top of that to fill in cracking and displacment. As a finishing coat, we apply a thin layer of cow manuer. This acts as a binder and give the wall a strong skin to adhere to. We like this method for it's qualities of environmentally safe, user friendly, and affordable, however we would like to develop a material that is thinner and lasts longer with more use. Further research into that is needed.