Future Building
Resembling in form and function ancestors such as Jean Prouvé’s prefab Tropical House, Architect Fred Friedmeyer’s prefab structures harmonize, as much as possible, with Ethiopia’s challenging natural environment.
Despite the popular notion of Ethiopia as a barren desert wasteland, the eastern African country also contains rugged inland mountains that make transportation of building materials extremely difficult, thus complicating humanitarian aid work in one of the poorest places on earth. Since 1999, Fred Friedmeyer III has been working on solutions to both of these issues, building prefabricated structures of his own design to house nurses, teachers, and agriculturalists living among the Gumuz, one of Ethiopia’s approximately 80 rural tribes and ethnic groups.
The San Diego–born, Cal Poly–trained architect and former construction contractor oversees his family’s 8,000-acre buffalo ranch in Alberta, Canada, for half of each year and spends the other half in Ethiopia, where he has built five of his modular dwellings to date. Each unit is composed of four units around a central open room, all enclosed by a large overhanging roof, with standard four-by-eight dimensions practically eliminating the need to cut the plywood panels used for sheathing and partitions. Materials are indigenous or easily sourced in Ethiopia, including louvered windows and the steel tubing used to create customized roof trusses. All welding is done in the city and then the parts are trucked out and bolted together on site. Since the hunter-gatherer Gumuz live in traditional thatch-roofed tukulas, Friedmeyer’s houses are also designed so they can easily be moved if their Western occupants relocate—in fact, the whole structure can be picked up and shifted. Alternately, the trusses can be jacked up and the bedroom/office modules removed such that the interiors can be converted to churches or serve the community in other capacities.
After transporting materials into the bush on the interdenominational Society for International Missions’ five-ton flatbed truck and trailer, a crew of four can have the structures, including plumbing and electrical, completed in three weeks at a cost of $25,000 to $30,000. Although this is about half the cost and a third the time necessary to build one of the area’s more common masonry structures, Friedmeyer is constantly refining his designs and streamlining the construction, hoping to increase productivity beyond his current pace of erecting one unit during each of his annual Ethiopian stays.
Resembling in form and function ancestors such as Jean Prouvé’s prefab Tropical House, Friedmeyer’s simple designs harmonize, as much as possible, with Ethiopia’s challenging natural environment. Solar panels and tubing harness the plentiful sunlight’s energy for radios, computers, and hot water while large roofs catch mountain breezes and heat chimneys dissipate interior warmth; when it’s 120 degrees in the African sun, the passively cooled houses are still comfortable. Despite their simplistic beauty, Friedmeyer’s designs are really manifestations of the functional, egalitarian tenets of modernism.
“The practical side, the cost, durability, speed, and adaptability are what I concentrate on,” notes the modest but gregarious designer when asked what inspires his designs. In a country with an average annual per-capita income of $110 and a legacy of warfare, drought, famine, and political instability, Friedmeyer views his work as facilitating basic but vitally important necessities to an all-but-ignored indigenous population. “Fifty percent of Gumuz children survive to be two years old,” he explains, a note of urgency piercing his otherwise placid demeanor. “They don’t even give a child a name until it can walk and talk. In that situation, helping them to have a steady diet, medical care, and some education is about the most important thing you can do.”
Advertising
Advertising
Advertising
Related Products
-
Prefab Prototypes: Site-Specific Design for Offsite Construction
A detailed guide to six different prefab…
-
Indego Africa Wine Bag
Wine is a go-to for gifting, and we are all…
Latest
-
02.07
Seven from Stockholm Design Week
It's about mid-way through the 2012 Stockholm Design Week and…
-
02.07
Hotel Fasano Boa Vista, Brazil
Just a few months ago, Fasano Hotels opened a sprawling…
-
02.05
The Scandic Grand Central, Stockholm
Greetings from Sweden! I'm traveling in Stockholm to cover the…
Follow
Dwell
-
Astounding archive preserves Europe's television heritage, 1900-present http://t.co/uHcTN4XZ #film via @lesleywgraham
-
7 new product designs from Stockholm #Design Week by Form Us With Love, Inga Sempe, Thomas Bernstrand, et al. http://t.co/xyheAMK1
-
Chattanooga's quest for its own font via @TheMorningNews http://t.co/PF9oMjoi #design
-
This past weekend brought some good wood to Nolita. Check out David Stark's Wood Shop pop-up: http://t.co/8AqyE6G0 #shopping



















I love where prefab is going. So many innovate design ideas are being generated, many at a reasonable cost.
Nice article! It’s good to see articles like this where public gets an insight into remote cultures and how Westerners can get involved. Preserving the vernacular traditions of any cultural heritage is good in its own right hence seeing that materials for these prefab structures are indigenous and easily sourced locally, in this case in Ethiopia, is definitely a positive use of local resources. Aside that, architects and builders can always find inspiration in vernacular solutions and native house styles, including Third World, and use them in house design and construction elsewhere.
Hi there, do you have contact details for Fred or an address for his practice. I am interested to build a structure in Malawi and I would love to speak with Fred about this. Dave
RSS Feed
Add a Comment