Transformation of vernacular housing pattern in periurban Abuja-Nigeria due to informal urbanism, 1976-2006

The phenomenon of informal housing is common to most cities of developing courtiers. Its role as single housing delivery mechanism has seriously challenged the popular notion held by policy makers, planners and architects. Informality is today a paradigm of city making in Africa, Asia and Latin Amer...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Mai, Moukhtar M.
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/1633/1/TRANSFORMATION_OF_VERNACULAR_HOUSING_PATTERN_IN_PERI-URBAN_ABUJA-NIGERIA_DUE_TO_INFORMAL_URBANISM%2C_1976-2006.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/1633/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
Language: English
id my.utm.1633
record_format eprints
spelling my.utm.16332017-09-06T04:45:12Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/1633/ Transformation of vernacular housing pattern in periurban Abuja-Nigeria due to informal urbanism, 1976-2006 Mai, Moukhtar M. G Geography (General) The phenomenon of informal housing is common to most cities of developing courtiers. Its role as single housing delivery mechanism has seriously challenged the popular notion held by policy makers, planners and architects. Informality is today a paradigm of city making in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The concurrence of informal housing with informal urbanism and housing poverty demands the concerted attention architects, planners, sociologist, urban designers and economists to articulate an appropriate paradigm that could effectively cart the way forward to housing for all year 2010. The research employs a three tier qualitative evaluation strategies to describe the characters of the case study, identify its trend of transformation, and determine the propelling motives for the virtual lost of its vernacular identity. This integrated approach is triangulated with photo recognition, purposively sampled compound plans, as well as a quantitative survey of the phenomenon. The preliminary findings of this study indicate that, for the indigenous Gbagyi community in Abuja urban fringes, their natural habitat seems to be threatened. The sustainability of its vernacular housing pattern physically, socially and psychologically may not survive the current urbanization trend. This could culminate in the lost of the spatial identity. For one, these settlements are expanding exponentially. For another, Gbagyi spatial identity of communal habitation of multiple courtyard compounds, dotted with symbolic tombs and granaries punctuating habitable spaces, sitting on ancestral plots, where the spirit of the dead inspires the living; the young and the old are psychologically glued to the living dead ‘the ancestral spirits,’ whose views are thought on survival issues, as and when required, is becoming extinct. The processes of housing identity were a times an intentional, but they still impact the settlement’s physical landscape. For instance the vernacular Gbagyi rural housing norms in the study area could not be transformed into ‘its own’ urban norms due to economic superiority of income over cultural sustainability. This is attributable to social mobility and its attendant economic and socio-cultural consequences. Although this case study is local, it is a pointer to global trends of housing delivery and identity. 2007 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/1633/1/TRANSFORMATION_OF_VERNACULAR_HOUSING_PATTERN_IN_PERI-URBAN_ABUJA-NIGERIA_DUE_TO_INFORMAL_URBANISM%2C_1976-2006.pdf Mai, Moukhtar M. (2007) Transformation of vernacular housing pattern in periurban Abuja-Nigeria due to informal urbanism, 1976-2006. In: Post-Graduate Seminar Semester 2 Session 2006/2007, 6 March 2007, Rumah Alumni, Universiti Teknologi Malaysia.
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
language English
topic G Geography (General)
spellingShingle G Geography (General)
Mai, Moukhtar M.
Transformation of vernacular housing pattern in periurban Abuja-Nigeria due to informal urbanism, 1976-2006
description The phenomenon of informal housing is common to most cities of developing courtiers. Its role as single housing delivery mechanism has seriously challenged the popular notion held by policy makers, planners and architects. Informality is today a paradigm of city making in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The concurrence of informal housing with informal urbanism and housing poverty demands the concerted attention architects, planners, sociologist, urban designers and economists to articulate an appropriate paradigm that could effectively cart the way forward to housing for all year 2010. The research employs a three tier qualitative evaluation strategies to describe the characters of the case study, identify its trend of transformation, and determine the propelling motives for the virtual lost of its vernacular identity. This integrated approach is triangulated with photo recognition, purposively sampled compound plans, as well as a quantitative survey of the phenomenon. The preliminary findings of this study indicate that, for the indigenous Gbagyi community in Abuja urban fringes, their natural habitat seems to be threatened. The sustainability of its vernacular housing pattern physically, socially and psychologically may not survive the current urbanization trend. This could culminate in the lost of the spatial identity. For one, these settlements are expanding exponentially. For another, Gbagyi spatial identity of communal habitation of multiple courtyard compounds, dotted with symbolic tombs and granaries punctuating habitable spaces, sitting on ancestral plots, where the spirit of the dead inspires the living; the young and the old are psychologically glued to the living dead ‘the ancestral spirits,’ whose views are thought on survival issues, as and when required, is becoming extinct. The processes of housing identity were a times an intentional, but they still impact the settlement’s physical landscape. For instance the vernacular Gbagyi rural housing norms in the study area could not be transformed into ‘its own’ urban norms due to economic superiority of income over cultural sustainability. This is attributable to social mobility and its attendant economic and socio-cultural consequences. Although this case study is local, it is a pointer to global trends of housing delivery and identity.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Mai, Moukhtar M.
author_facet Mai, Moukhtar M.
author_sort Mai, Moukhtar M.
title Transformation of vernacular housing pattern in periurban Abuja-Nigeria due to informal urbanism, 1976-2006
title_short Transformation of vernacular housing pattern in periurban Abuja-Nigeria due to informal urbanism, 1976-2006
title_full Transformation of vernacular housing pattern in periurban Abuja-Nigeria due to informal urbanism, 1976-2006
title_fullStr Transformation of vernacular housing pattern in periurban Abuja-Nigeria due to informal urbanism, 1976-2006
title_full_unstemmed Transformation of vernacular housing pattern in periurban Abuja-Nigeria due to informal urbanism, 1976-2006
title_sort transformation of vernacular housing pattern in periurban abuja-nigeria due to informal urbanism, 1976-2006
publishDate 2007
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/1633/1/TRANSFORMATION_OF_VERNACULAR_HOUSING_PATTERN_IN_PERI-URBAN_ABUJA-NIGERIA_DUE_TO_INFORMAL_URBANISM%2C_1976-2006.pdf
http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/1633/
_version_ 1643643377810407424