Building Technologies
In Africa the demand for decent
housing at prices ordinary people can afford is a problem that many
hundreds of entrepreneurs are helping to solve using technologies
developed by KickStart engineers:
The Action Pack Block Press
Four workers using this heavy duty manual press can produce 500 rock
hard building blocks a day, compacting a soil/cement mixture under high
mechanical pressure. The press is adjustable for use with almost any
soil type and just 1 bag of cement makes over 100 bricks. Blocks can be
sold profitably to build walls at half the cost of the concrete block
or stone walls.
The Micro-Concrete Roofing Tile Plant
Five workers are able to produce 300 strong attractive fiber concrete
roof (FCR) tiles daily using this special vibrating table (manually or
battery powered) and a set of molds. Tiles can be made in a range of
colors, profiles, and thicknesses.
Tiles can be sold profitably to clad roofs for half the cost of conventional concrete or clay tiles.
The Micro-Concrete Roofing Tile Plant is a technology that we no longer manufacture or sell.
Latrine Cover Slabs
In Africa the challenge of making sanitation affordable for residents
of peri-urban and rural settlements can be met by small businesses
making and installing the low cost KickStart ‘Domeslab’ pit latrine
cover.
The
‘Domeslab’ is produced using equipment designed by KickStart for the
UNHCR (United Nations High Commission for Refuges) during the Somali
refugee crisis in 1992. Circular domed concrete slabs with tight
fitting lids are quickly and simply cast on site using minimal
quantities of cement, and no steel reinforcement. These are easily
installed by placing them over the latrine pit.
Two workers
can cast 3 slabs per day. A domeslab latrine costs a fraction of a
conventional reinforced concrete slab latrine or “Ventilated Improved
Pit (VIP)” latrine. This technology is presently in use in refugee
camps all over East & Central Africa where relief agencies have
installed over 90,000 KickStart domeslabs.
Low Cost High Quality Carpentry Tools
Carpentry
hand tools generally available in Africa are imports, either cheap and
of poor quality, or expensive and of high quality. Market studies led
KickStart to develop three tools for local manufacture which combine
high performance with low cost: the sash clamp, spoke shave, and plough
plane. The sash clamp, spoke shave, and plough plane have been
discontinued as we focus on irrigation products.
All of the
KickStart carpentry tools are very robust and can be produced using
sets of jigs and fixtures especially designed for local manufacturers.
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