African Design Magazine October 2016 | Page 60

African project Home Kisito – Burkina Faso afternoon sun, reduce the height to a scale more in line with the children and provide an abundance of mango fruits. The interior of the building is kept cool thanks to the compressed earth walls, vaulted ceilings and flooring. The coloured “insect screens” on the façades allow the vestibule to be configured as a protected, permanently ventilated internal passageway, permitting cross ventilation and emitting warm rising air. This effect is accentuated with the openings at the opposing ends of this corridor (northsouth) and at the level of the terraces (east-west), as well as in the vertical plane, with the interruption of BTC in the central vaults being replaced by an insect screen on a metal frame. The excavation and concrete elements were awarded to a company which agreed to reduce profit margins, taking the social nature of the project into account. The walls were built by young trainees and the ceilings by a highly experienced crew. The stonework and metallic structure was entrusted to teams who had already worked on previous projects, such as the group of women who rendered the interior stone facing by hand with clay plastering. And lastly, the architects adapted the local technique to make chairs and loungers weaving with coloured plastic mesh to make the “mosquito nets” of the façade and corridor, working with an association of blind and partially sighted people. Photographs: Giovanni Quattrocolo and Albert Faus 60 africandesignmagazine.com