Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10071/34306
Author(s): | Serrazina, B. |
Editor: | Stefan Holzer Silke Langenberg Clemens Knobling Orkun Kasap |
Date: | 2024 |
Title: | “Model” workers’ villages?: Company rule and adobe-brick houses in late colonial Africa |
Book title/volume: | Proceedings of the 8th International Congress on Construction History |
Pages: | 1216 - 1222 |
Event title: | Construction matters |
Reference: | Serrazina, B. (2024). “Model” workers’ villages?: Company rule and adobe-brick houses in late colonial Africa. In S. Holzer, S. Langenberg, C. Knobling, & O. Kasap (Eds.), Proceedings of the 8th International Congress on Construction History (pp. 1216-1222). Vdf Hochschulverlag. https://dx.doi.org/10.3218/4166-8 |
ISBN: | 978-3-7281-4166-8 |
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): | 10.3218/4166-8 |
Abstract: | In the early 1920s, a severe influenza epidemic in the Panda mining camps, recently founded by Union Minière in southern Belgian Congo, shed light on the importance of housing material conditions. Due to medical studies and reports, a solution was soon to be found in single-family adobe houses. Bricks arguably offered plenty of “benefits”: they were cheap, made with local raw materials, easily assembled on site and did not require much expertise or heavy machinery. For the following decades, adobe was put forward by mining enterprises as a tool for and a symbol of control, neatness, salubrity, productivity and social hierarchy. When industrialization and urbanization issues became strongly entangled in the 1950s, the materialization of workers’ houses was not only a case study for scientists but also a key instrument to counter international politics and anxieties about African housing. This paper questions the role of the adobe-brick components in shaping the built environment in late colonial Africa. What was their impact on house design, construction sites and building teams? To what extent did they compete with other technologies, namely concrete and stone? The overlooked histories of mining villages’ construction illuminate significant trans-imperial circuits of knowledge transfer, running from the first on-site connections to the late international expert meetings. Far from being “workingman’s paradises”, as most company official reports suggested, adobe villages materialized multiple combinations of economic, social, moral and power guises, thus offering new perspectives on colonial construction, away from canonized actors, materials and norms. |
Peerreviewed: | yes |
Access type: | Open Access |
Appears in Collections: | DINÂMIA'CET-CRI - Comunicações a conferências internacionais |
Files in This Item:
File | Size | Format | |
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conferenceObject_104695.pdf | 1,84 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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