Resumen:
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The Mapungubwe National Park Interpretive Centre, South Africa achieves economy of
means, social improvement and low environmental impact in a remote World Heritage site.
This paper outlines the design methodology and ...[+]
The Mapungubwe National Park Interpretive Centre, South Africa achieves economy of
means, social improvement and low environmental impact in a remote World Heritage site.
This paper outlines the design methodology and construction process for a series of thin
shell domes and vaults in rural South Africa. We use the Valencian tradition of tile
vaulting, a 700-year-old construction system, to create lightweight and durable buildings
from thin soil-cement bricks. The load-bearing masonry is used to construct roof vaults
achieving high structural strength with minimal material. The largest free-form vaults span
14.5m with an unreinforced masonry vault of 300mm thickness. We replaced fired-clay
bricks with less energy-intensive stabilized earth tiles, which have a well-established
tradition in sustainable practice. At Mapungubwe they are used to create sophisticated
engineered forms by adapting a hand-press to locally manufacture tiles of sufficient
strength. In addition to being structurally efficient, elegantly simple and environmentally
sustainable, tile vaults have advantages for construction in developing areas. When
compared to conventional construction, this system offers material and financial savings,
waste reduction, and local employment with transferable outputs and skills for future
projects. For this project, we introduced the structural masonry of tile vaults to South
Africa, and for the first time we combined tile vaulting with locally made stabilized earth
tiles that have low embodied energy. No steel reinforcing simplifies construction, lowers
cost and reduces embodied energy. The vaults are built with minimal support, saving time,
money and resources on formwork. The Centre represents a significant step forward in
structure and material for sustainable construction.
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