Treatment in progress...
Close notification

Did you know that ?

SIDE has worked with its suppliers to make our parcels environmentally friendly.
No more plastics !
The tape that keep our parcels tightly shut and the wedging material that immobilizes books within the cartons are now made of fully recyclable and biodegradable materials.

Display notification

The value of building bioclimatic residential buildings in tropical environments from local materials

Soumaré Elhadj Malick
Publication date 02/05/2024
EAN: 9782336426181
Availability Available from publisher
This book, aimed at Engineers, Architects, Building Technicians, and Students, offers a crucial insight into bioclimatic building construction in Tropical Africa. It addresses the common oversight of climatic characteristics in building design, empha... See full description
Attribute nameAttribute value
Common books attribute
PublisherL'HARMATTAN
Page Count390
Languageen
AuthorSoumaré Elhadj Malick
FormatPaperback / softback
Product typeBook
Publication date02/05/2024
Weight662 g
Dimensions (thickness x width x height)2.10 x 15.50 x 24.00 cm
This book, aimed at Engineers, Architects, Building Technicians, and Students, offers a crucial insight into bioclimatic building construction in Tropical Africa. It addresses the common oversight of climatic characteristics in building design, emphasizing the need to consider weather conditions, especially in warm periods. The book analyzes current housing, compares it with vernacular and colonial models, and proposes bioclimatic designs using passive architectural techniques.A key model involves a mathematical analysis of complex admittances, considering local materials like hollow blocks, BTCS, terracotta bricks, laterite stones, granite rubble, and vibrated mortar tiles. Combined with passive techniques, this forms a bioclimatic building model tailored to dry tropical climates. The author, in accessible language, advocates for promoting locally available materials as alternatives to conventional ones, anticipating potential shortages in building aggregates in tropical African countries.