Architect and Builder Magazine South Africa May/June 2014 | Page 79

MIENTJIE VAN NIEKERK NELSON MANDELA METROPOLITAN UNIVERSITY Mientjie van Niekerk’s thesis was entitled “A platform for trade and interaction.” The platform comprises an essential oil distillation plant, an informal market and a cattle trading area for the Ovahimba people of Opuwo, Namibia. The lively town of Opuwo is located in the North Western part of Namibia and is the capital of the Ovahimba people. This cultural group is made up of traditional nomadic pastoralists who move in search of good grazing land and water to take care of their sacred cattle herds. Opuwo is a meeting place where the Ovahimba nomads, tourists and local people come together to trade and interact , forming a rich node of energy in the very harsh climatic environment of the Kaokoveld. The dynamism of Opuwo is produced by tourists travelling to the Kunene River, surrounding Ovahimba settlement groups coming to Opuwo for the necessary resources and facilities, Ovahimba men travelling hundreds of kilometres for cattle trading and traditional Himba harvesters coming to sell their Commiphora Wildii resin and Mopane seed gatherings. The design proposal was fuelled by these energy sources in order to create a new town centre with an essential oil processing plant as the catalyst project. Mientjie also received an award for best use of clay brick. She says she incorporated thick mass walls of clay bricks which were used to create a protective skin in the same way the red earth mixture protects the Ovhaimba people from the harsh climatic conditions in Opuwo. The entire design proposal was dressed in ochre colour bricks which bind the architecture to the immediate context and created a cool and comfortable internal working environment. Student Awards 79