Effects of Architectural Stability, Architectural Concept and Building ELEMEN...
Effects of Architectural Stability, Architectural Concept and Building ELEMEN...
Effects of Architectural Stability, Architectural Concept and Building ELEMEN...
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BY
MUHAMMAD AMINU MUSA
Department Of Architecture, Faculty Of Environmental Design, Ahmadu Bello University Zaria
ammusa@abu.edu.ng
ABSTRACT.
Developing Countries like Nigeria are presently being aggrieved more by flood, erosion and wind storm, whereas the
danger of desertification and seaside blizzard are being fortified due to climate change, consequently the need to study
disaster architecture is very important so that buildings which are mostly affected could be rescued in future. Disaster
is simply a condition overpowers dweller’s capability, necessitating appeal to a national level for outside support. It
can also be explained to as unexpected also frequently abrupt happening that bring-about pronounced destruction,
impairment plus social suffering. Houses epitomize the uppermost misses due to natural disaster. The research is
designed to investigate the effects of stability, concept and building elements, on the disaster resilient in Architecture.
This is done by using 12 case studies spread all over the world, to find out the effects of architectural stability(s) on
disaster resilient in buildings; examining the relationship between architectural elements and the buildings disaster
resilient and lastly to identify whether architectural concept has anything to do with buildings disaster resilient. The
result found out that, Architectural concept is resilient to four out of five types of natural disasters which includes:
Geophysical; climatological; Meteorological; and Hydrological, while the other two; element of Architecture and
Architectural stability are resilient to only one out of five types of natural disaster, which is Meteorological disaster.
It further recommends that, architects when designing in disaster prone areas should give more emphasize to the
concept to produce disaster resistant buildings.
Keywords. Disaster Resilient; Concept; Stability; Elements of Architecture
INTRODUCTION
There are range of natural disaster which are dangerous to environment from erosion, climate change,
drought, heat wave, flood, hailstorm, earthquake, landslide, natural wild fire, volcano, tsunami, and
desertification, among others. Lyons (2009) thoughts that, houses represent large percentage loss, owing to
the natural disaster. The Vietnam’s authority according to, Monre (2008), considers housing as one of the
4 supreme helpless areas to harsh climate. Misadventures have sustained to cause stark shattering moments
in the forfeiture of human lives. For instance, conferring to James, Shaba. Zubair, Teslim, Yusuf, and Nuhu,
(2013), about hundred persons perished in Ibadan owing to deluge in 2011 whereas 5,000 persons were
expatriated with unembellished fiscal effects, Likewise, Niekerk and Dewald, (2007) said that, Hurricane
Katrina in the Harbor of Mexico steered to 1,400 losses amid 23th August, and 30th August, 2005, with
severe economic losses. Additional one by Twig (2004), is the 9.2 magnitude of earthquake that happened
in Indian Ocean on December 26, 2004 instigated a huge tsunami disaster which submerged more
than 10 shoreline nations then capped in nearby 300,000 demises with critical financial and ecological
effects. The measure of devastation of these natural calamities was more in the continent of Asia, followed
by North America and least in Africa (Odjugo, 2012). Nigeria is currently being afflicted more by flood,
wind storm, and erosion while the menace of desertification and coastal inundation are being reinforced
due to climate change, consequently the need to study disaster architecture is very important so that
buildings which are mostly affected could be salvaged. The following questions are raised concerning the
menace; are there buildings that resist disaster menace? What are the likely causes of buildings’ resilient in
architecture? Are these causes be related to typology of disaster? The exploration is pointed at examining
the effects of stability, concept and Building elements on the disaster resilient in Architecture. This is
achieved by using 12 case study to find out the effects of architectural stability(s) on disaster resilient in
12
Musa M.A (2016). Effects of Architectural Stability, Architectural Concept and Building Elements on Disaster Resilient in Architecture.
The Built Environment: Achieving Environmental Sustainability, inclusive Growth and Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century.
Proceedings of the First International Conference Of the Faculty of Environmental Studies Federal University of Uyo Nigeria, (Pp12-
20). Uyo
buildings; and also to explore the relationship between architectural elements and the buildings disaster
resilient and lastly to identify whether architectural concept has anything to do with buildings disaster
resilient.
Architectural concept is the philosophy behind a design, whereas building element covers all
essentials that are mainly part of the construction of a building. For instance; roof, wall, eave. Architectural
stability denotes the degree to which a building system can bear changes while leaving the architecture of
the structure undamaged. There are a number of definition of disaster such include: A Merriam Lexicon
outlines misadventure as an unexpected disastrous experience causes serious mutilation, forfeiture, or
annihilation; also Quarentelly (1957), believed that, Disaster is a emergency condition instigating extensive
spread destruction which far surpasses our aptitude to recuperate. The most acceptable definition is by the
Center for Research on the Epidemiology of Disaster (CRED) at Brussels, Belgium, in Annual Disaster
Statistical Review (2015), which describes Adversity as “a situation or event overwhelms local capacity,
necessitating request to a national or international level for external assistance; an unforeseen and often
sudden event that causes great damage, destruction and human suffering.” Calamities are classified into
two categories: Natural disasters, which consists of floods, earthquakes, landslides; and artificial disasters
which include, explosives, war, chemical leaks. Moreover, the complete EM-DAT classified disaster into
two categories, CRED (2015): technological; and natural disasters, and further sub organize natural disaster
into 5 which are; Geophysical, are actions initiating from solid earth; Meteorological, are occasions
triggered by brief to meso-scale atmospheric processes; Hydrological are happenings affected by
aberrations in the standard water cycle and bodies of water triggered by wind set-up; Climatological are
events produced by prolonged/ meso- to macro-scale courses; and Biological which is cataclysm caused
by the acquaintance of living organisms to germs and noxious matter.
RESEARCH DESIGN
In conducting this research, an intensive literature review was conducted from published and unpublished
materials: books, journals, papers, thesis and internet (references of past works) were selected and reviewed.
The case study method was used to measure the relationship between variables and disaster resilient
typology on the affected buildings within the disaster prone areas around the world. It is done by using
statistical tools to show the relationships.
CASE STUDIES
In this section, twelve (12) disaster resilient cases are examined as case studies in the disaster prone areas
worldwide, and extract the possible architectural reasons for the subsequent cases that may happen in
Nigeria and globally.
Housing Vulnerability in Danang Vietnam
The following were inferred in Vietnam by Centro canadiense de Estudios Cooperación Internacional
(CECI) after a storm and typhoon, from 2000 to 2008: Observation was made by CECI (2003) that, Houses
with altitude higher than 3.6m are grater susceptible towards tempest and cyclone. According to CECI
(2003) and Duy, Wanner, Meda, Wirén, Soll, Philippar (2007) , building shapes like T,L and U-forms as
shown in figure 1, are more to be devastated than other shapes, as they produce wind-pressure gears through
blizzard and tornado. Duy et al.(2007) also detected that, lengthy quadrangular designs with the ratio of
length to breadth greater than 2.5, are likewise helpless to squall and monsoon.
13
Musa M.A (2016). Effects of Architectural Stability, Architectural Concept and Building Elements on Disaster Resilient in Architecture.
The Built Environment: Achieving Environmental Sustainability, inclusive Growth and Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century.
Proceedings of the First International Conference Of the Faculty of Environmental Studies Federal University of Uyo Nigeria, (Pp12-
20). Uyo
Moreover, roof shape has specific effect to disaster, such as twin roof which creates gable walls directly
open to winds (CECI, 2003) as indicated in figure 2. So also, CECI (2008) observed that, Long roof eaves
are simply damaged by strong winds.
Another factor to be considered is link beam on the top of adjoining walls; the long rectangular plan
produces the lengthy gable barriers deprived from one united dividers in-between, to
with no Architects. Though, it will be noticed that, such local communities from the perspective of
misadventure’s supervision. Snapshot bellow, shows Sotodomari’s stone walls, a hilly community in Ehime
District. During the 19th century stone walls were raised up to avoid destruction from both brackish rust in
addition to robust storm squalls.
The Coral Reef Scheme entails a thousand linked dwellings in twofold curly piles as shown in figure 6,
braced on an synthetic dock erected on seismic heaps in the Caribbean. By means of vigor collected from
the water-turbines, waves, and sea heat energy conversion, the edifice develops the average of living, giving
green balconies for every pad-in shell besides streamlining distribution of deliveries.
15
Musa M.A (2016). Effects of Architectural Stability, Architectural Concept and Building Elements on Disaster Resilient in Architecture.
The Built Environment: Achieving Environmental Sustainability, inclusive Growth and Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century.
Proceedings of the First International Conference Of the Faculty of Environmental Studies Federal University of Uyo Nigeria, (Pp12-
20). Uyo
the tsunami which charted the Nihonkai Chubu Earthquake in 1983. That ecosystem proves both
proficiency and the prospect of ecological schemes in the mischance avoidance and alleviation in seaside
zone. This method of shoreline foliage likewise evidenced to be operative counter to tsunami in a number
of other nations when in 2004 tsunami occurred, in India.
it was designed by Remistudio, to repel seismic effect, besides, it has an exclusively see-through portico
to fashion an environment that could let food production if required. Shell-shaped hotel would endure tidal
waves and other natural calamities and the daylight sieved through internal rooms to ease need for lighting.
Sun energy plates and precipitation assortment will offer occupants with liveliness plus water and the lowest
half of the hotel seats in a depression in the earth, allowing it to derive slack and hover.
this is an Earth quake resistant structure, designed to look like a foot-ball and to resist natural adversity, as
shown below
;
Fig.10. buildings survive for centuries built with sticky rice as motar.
more than 1500 years ago which is largely responsible for the strength of the edifices, which have endured
many earthquakes together with earthmovers.
17
Musa M.A (2016). Effects of Architectural Stability, Architectural Concept and Building Elements on Disaster Resilient in Architecture.
The Built Environment: Achieving Environmental Sustainability, inclusive Growth and Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century.
Proceedings of the First International Conference Of the Faculty of Environmental Studies Federal University of Uyo Nigeria, (Pp12-
20). Uyo
The figure 11 is a unique dome resident in a Florida Beach known as Pensacola. It was able to scale through
4 hurricanes such as the overwhelming Katrina, Dennis and Ivan. The owners by names Valerie Sigler and
Mark gathered $7 million for the Hurricane resistant house to be constructed, this was because their resident
was completely destroyed in 1995, leaving them homeless for 1 year and 2 months.
18
Musa M.A (2016). Effects of Architectural Stability, Architectural Concept and Building Elements on Disaster Resilient in Architecture.
The Built Environment: Achieving Environmental Sustainability, inclusive Growth and Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century.
Proceedings of the First International Conference Of the Faculty of Environmental Studies Federal University of Uyo Nigeria, (Pp12-
20). Uyo
All that space under the house isn’t wasted – in fair weather, it functions as a screened-in shade porch.
Fig.13. Raised Home Escapes
1 Architectural Concept Building height Houses with height less than less vulnerable to storm
3.6m and typhoon
2 Architectural Concept Building Shape T-shape, L-shape and U-shape more vulnerable to
plans are storm and typhoon
3 Architectural Concept Roof Shape Twin roof makes the gable walls more vulnerable to wind
directly exposed to winds
4 Building Element Roof Eaves Long roof eaves more vulnerable to
strong wind and fire.
5 Architectural bond beam bond beam on the top of stable during typhoon
Stability surrounding walls
19
Musa M.A (2016). Effects of Architectural Stability, Architectural Concept and Building Elements on Disaster Resilient in Architecture.
The Built Environment: Achieving Environmental Sustainability, inclusive Growth and Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century.
Proceedings of the First International Conference Of the Faculty of Environmental Studies Federal University of Uyo Nigeria, (Pp12-
20). Uyo
15
10
ARCH. CONCEPT
5
0 BUILDING ELEMENTS
ARCH. STABILITY
Fig. 14: relationship between research constructs and Natural Disaster Typology
20
Musa M.A (2016). Effects of Architectural Stability, Architectural Concept and Building Elements on Disaster Resilient in Architecture.
The Built Environment: Achieving Environmental Sustainability, inclusive Growth and Competitiveness in the Twenty-First Century.
Proceedings of the First International Conference Of the Faculty of Environmental Studies Federal University of Uyo Nigeria, (Pp12-
20). Uyo
10
5 ARCH. CONCEPT
0 BUILDING ELEMENTS
ARCH. STABILITY
REFERENCES
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Adaptation to Climate Change project. Vietnam.
CECI. 2008, Manual for Housing Construction for basic Resistance to Flood and Storm Da
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Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Diseases (CRED), 2015. Université Catholique de
Louvain, Ecole de Santé Publique. Brussels.
Duy D, Wanner G, Meda AR, von Wirén N, Soll J, Philippar K PIC1, 2007, an ancient permease
in Arabidopsis chloroplasts, mediates iron transport. Plant Cell 19: 986–1006.
James G., Shaba H., Zubair O., Teslim A., Yusuf G., and Nuhu A., 2013, Based Disaster
Management in Nigeria: the role of the international charter space and major disasters.
Environment for sustainability, Abuja, Nigeria.
Lyons, M. 2009, Building Back Better: The Large-Scale Impact of Small-Scale Approaches
to Reconstruction. World Development. World Development 37(2):385-398 ·
Monre, M. O. N. R. A. E. 2008, National target program for climate change response. Hanoi:
Vietnamese Government.
Niekerk, D.V., 2007, Disaster Risk Reduction, Disaster Risk Management and Disaster
Management:Academic Rhetoric or Practical Reality? Journal of the Disaster Management
Institute of Southern Africa, 4(1), Pp.6-9:
Odjugo, P. A. O. 2012, Global natural disaster and their implications on human sustainability,
Sustainable Development and Environmental Protection, Department of Geography and Regional
Planning University of Benin, Nigeria.
Quarantelli, E.L. 1957, The behaviour of panic participants. Sociology and Social Research. 41.
Pp. 187-194.
Rudofsky, B. 1965, Architecture without Architects, Doubleday and Company, Inc., Garden City,
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Twig J. 2004, Disaster risk reduction: Mitigation and preparedness in development and emergency
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