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ShelterAntoon Versteegde
Lightweight structures of bamboo
02 | Shelter
Antoon Versteegde has given lectures and workshops for many years; he organizes educational and solidarity projects with artists and amateurs, children, students and professionals. This work has taught him that we all benefit from the insights of others; children, for example, often suggest surprising approaches to structural solutions. Most of the photos illustrate students experimenting with geo-metric shapes and structures, top center is a group of stewardesses experiencing solidarity and fun building a model of the Eiffel Tower.
Preface
Shelters, made of sheets of fabric attached to a frame of bamboo poles.
And the whole world became bound in one language and one vision,
dominion; planet earth was in peril. Then the people turned to art, they
learned again to build their own shelter, with sheets of fabric attached
to a frame of bamboo poles...
During the past 25 years I have made transient structural art in-
stallations of bamboo poles tied together with rubber bands, some
stood for one day, others for several weeks, but never more than
three months. This places temporary installations in the realm of
special memories, and surprisingly fun happenings. Now I have
invested time to express this knowledge through serious study
into the use of lightweight bamboo structures to build tempo-
rary as-well-as permanent shelter. These techniques are begin-
ning to be practiced around the world, they are becoming known
as self-sheltering; the ultimate impact will be profound, socially and economically.
This booklet is not intended as a step-by-step guide, rather, as an inspiration to show
what is possible; realizing every person and region is different. Self-sheltering also
varies with available materials: willow branches, bamboo sticks, PVC pipe or card-
board tubes...? Instead of rubber, you can also think of ropes, straps, wire, tape, glue,
etcetera. I hope this brochure will inspire you to make your own insights and solutions.
Antoon Versteegde
03Shelter |
Shelter | 05
Basic structure • Bamboo poles cross each other up or down to create a solid frame.
Bamboo poles can
quickly be attached to
each other with rubber
bands.
Intersections can also
be bound with plastic
tie-wraps, rope or tape.
Bamboo is the poor man's timber and everybodies friend.
Shelter | 07
Bamboo poles can quickly be attached to each other with rubber bands. Inter-
sections can also be bound with plastic ties and wraps, rope, rattan or tape.
There are many methods used for joining bamboo poles, historical binding
techniques utilized various fibers, such as from the rattan palm, which are
often softened and made pliable with water. Although traditional binding ma-
terials remain useful, modern materials bring new opportunities.
These nodes are wrapped in burlap or muslin strips dipped in cement after
all the bamboo poles have been temporarily tied. Strips about 3-6 centime-
ters wide and 40-80 cm long are easy to apply if they are rolled onto a short
piece of bamboo after the fabric is thoroughly soaked with cement slurry.
Rubber bands proved ideal for temporary art installations with public partici-
pation because the binding method is flexible, easily understood and inter-
ested individuals can become involved without needing protective clothing
or gloves.
Cotton muslin soaked with a mixture of acrylic and standard construction
cement has proven to be a very strong binding, similarly treated burlap also
works well but is more bulky. Though tape is not as flexible as rubber bands,
it is easily cut and replaced, if necessary.
Muslin soaked with waterproof carpenter's glue will also provide a strong
binding. Below is an example of muslin soaked with acrylic and cement ap-
plied over a preliminary tape wrap.
These joint wraps look like cloth but are in fact perfectly reinforced concrete,
far beyond human strength. One connection costs about the same as one
nail and will last many years.
Binding techniques
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Roof rafters and ridge • This bamboo structure will easily support sturdy roof sheathing.
Consider beforehand
what, when and why a
bamboo pole should be
used upright or upside-
down to give you the
best advantage.
Forces of wind and storm are subtly damped by a flexible structure.
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Skelet • The shelter skeleton is like bamboo bones and joints bandaged in fabric and cement.
The frame of the
house takes shape
rather quickly. It can
be covered with plastic
sheeting for emergency
shelter or become
the frame of a fine
art sculptured home
which provides pride of
place. A beautiful and
secure home presented
through personal ex-
pression via self-shel-
tering provides unfor-
tunate populations with
a healthy response to
the trials of poverty or
disaster.
A roof protects from rain. Add artistic detail with sculptured rain gutters to collect clean drinking water.
Spontaneous public participation in creation of art immerses one in the delightful
realization that expression of life is beautiful, joyous and fun. Self-sheltering is
direct action to satisfy the primal need for shelter, it opens the soul to freedom
from need through joy of personal accomplishment. Those beset by poverty and
disaster are occupied full-time with basic needs. Creative spirit is released to the
benefit of all when folk art becomes self-sheltering so beautiful it also provides
pride of place. New ideas will be born from chronic poverty and disaster, even the
most fortunate will receive unforeseen gifts from newly invigorated souls.
Organized humanitarian relief is trapped by old methods of providing goods from
approved suppliers, this can take the life out of living and create ghettos of tents
and other factory shelter. The time for self-sheltering is now. Billions of people
displaced by disaster, war and planned economic impoverishment overwhelm all
organizational visions. Self-sheltering with a little help from friends is one of very
few paths to the universal justice required for a sustainable human culture.
Self sheltering
12 | Shelter
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Roof structure • The bamboo poles together form a cohesive structure.
When you look up,
you see that this
bamboo roof truss
will absorb a lot of
wind and can carry
much weight.
Tie-wraps are easily made and quickly placed, with very few tools.
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Inner tubes • Abrasive cement may be covered with pieces of inner tube.
Even a temporary roof
provides one with a
feeling of security and
safety.
Plastic sheeting or canvas is easily cut to fit all shapes and sizes. Temporary covering gives time to calmly assess and plan.
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Featherlight roof • Secure it in place as quickly as possible, so it will not no tear or blow away.
Winter is near, it's
pressing cold and a
roof is needed. Let
your imagination soar.
Think of knee pads,
let rubber flaps catch
the strength of the wind
and protect the roof
membrane.
Each house is different, just as no two people are exactly the same. Decorate your door and tell the world it is you who lives there.
Shelter | 21
Heavy weights • The supporting grid of this roof is held in place by stone weights.
The setting sun colors
the roof of your new
home as if it were a
royal palace.
Wooden pallets are perfect for an elevated, dry floor.
22 | Shelter
Bamboo is a wonder plant, its many uses include erosion control, watershed protection, soil remediation, and envi-ronmental greening. It is the fastest growing timber plant on earth with many applications as a wood substitute.
Increased awareness of bamboo's immense potential will create livelihood opportunities and contribute to the well-being and quality of life; cultivation and use of bamboo as a timber substitute will reduce the pressure on hardwood for-ests and shelter the homeless. Very successful bamboo housing has shown that we are all in a position to take advantage of this remarkable natural resource.
Traditionally used in many countries, colonial powers con-vinced subjugated peoples bamboo is poor man's timber. Today, bamboo is again much prized. It is a multipurpose plant with secondary economic benefits that do not easily compute in methods utilized by modern economies. Secondary economic benefits of self-sheltering are equally elusive numerically, even so, environmental and social ben-efits clearly contribute to a sustainable human culture.
Key Features of Bamboo
Bamboo grows more rapidly than trees, harvest begins •about four years after planting, full production occurs within seven years.
Bamboo is selectively harvested annually and nonde-•structively.
Creating a family or village scale bamboo farm is easy •and requires very little money.
Bamboo production may be located to restore degraded •land and protect against soil erosion.
There are many bamboo varieties, some are non-invasive •and may be intercropped with vegetables.
The entire bamboo plant is beneficial: • - poles (culms) are a superb construction material; - young shoots are edible; - leaves make good animal fodder and bedding; - branches are useful for making handicrafts.
Inter-nodal regions of the bamboo plant stem are hollow cylinders. Vascular bundles are unobstructed tubes which create strong fibers running the entire pole length; they are tightly packed throughout the pole circumference, not in tree-like rings. Bamboo has the potential to grow to full height and girth in a single growing season of 3-4 months. During this first season, the clump of young shoots grow vertically, with no branching. In the next year, the pulpy wall of each culm slowly dries and hardens. The culm begins to sprout branches and leaves from each node. During the third year, the culm further hardens and is now considered a fully mature culm ready for harvest and suitable for use in construction. Time-to-harvest will vary slightly with variety, soil and climate.
Bamboo sheltering
Shelter is among the most basic of human needs. Bamboo is so beautifully practical that it was probably used to make shelter the moment people first noticed it. Bamboo shelters are used both for temporary and long-term residence.
Shelter is accomplished by sheets of fabric or thatch over a frame of bamboo poles attached to the ground. Temporary shelters may evolve into artistic sculptures which will last many years, even generations. Temporary or permanent bamboo shelters range in size from single person tents to an architecturally beautiful structure large enough for a hos-pital or school.
Bamboo shelter designs could be inspired by tents. They can be used in humanitarian emergencies, such as war, earthquakes and fire, instead of tents, which are more expensive per unit of floor area, and usually not large enough for normal family living.
At times, however, these temporary shelters will become a semi-permanent home, especially for displaced people liv-ing in refugee camps who can't return to their former home and for whom no replacement homes are available. So think about this manual, billions of people need it, and their hap-piness effects us all.
Published by Stichting De Lutteltuin.nl • Copyrights © Antoon Versteegde 1984-2010 • c/o PictoRight NL • ISBN 90-800898-1-8
This publication was made possible with support of The Netherlands Foundation for Visual Arts, Design and Architecture • fondsbkvb.nl
Bamboo, the poor man's timber
23Shelter |
Self-sheltering has been suggested for restoring the productivity of billions of people who have been displaced through natural disasters, war and the scramble for industrial scale resources, production and agriculture. The above photos support brief mention made of using the same techniques for larger infrastructure such as schools and hospitals. Imagine an emergency hospital quickly built and enclosed in a very remote location, finish work can proceed outside while emergency medical care is delivered inside.
Lightweight structures of bamboo
Visual artist Antoon Versteegde has established his artistic freedom in a social milieu that transcends traditional institutes, exhibition spaces and artistic methods. He has conceived and created the very large temporary art constructions pictured in this manual in completely public spaces, with free access to all who are curious and interested enough to be welcomed as participants in his public art.
It is the public aspect of these artistic works which establishes Antoon Versteegde as a master of art happenings eminently qualified to discuss and help define self-sheltering for billions who are without adequate shelter.
Self-sheltering utilizes techniques with sculpturally beautiful and durable light-weight materials, it opens broad intellectual vistas for examination of a sustain- able human culture which includes everyone and any- one who learns these techniques and then provides themselves with super low-cost shelter, potable water and sanitation.
www.versteegde.nl
Self-sheltering
Natural and human made disasters have become more difficult to alleviate with increased population. The first level problem facing emergency responders is simply increased quantity due to larger populations effected. A second and more subtle problem associ-ated with larger numbers of people caught in disas-ter is inadvertent creation of ghettos by emergency responders, humans do not live well for very long in large tent cities. Innovative solutions to emergency as well as chronic shelter inadequacy are difficult to visu-alize for large aid organizations which are accustomed to working with favored contract suppliers. Self-shel-tering is a proven innovation growing to maturity inde-pendently because it focuses the energies of those in need. Self-sheltering benefits all humanity.
Pictures are included for self-confidence and inspiration.
www.self-sheltering.org