Cabaña Naomin - Mud Building workshop - April 8-15, 2017 "I want to be like animals, the bird makes a nest in one or two days, the rat digs a hole in a night, but intelligent humans like us spend 30 years to have a house, that's wrong." Jon Jandai The design approach is a culmination of lessons learnt through years of observation of ants and birds building their habitat. The teaching method is based on close observations of the didactics of a third generation vault builder to his 14 year old apprentice son in Mexico. Objective of the project is to build a ultra low cost Cabin for Casa Naomin, a modest family run yoga school, located deep in the forests of Santa rosa de lima, Guanajuato, Mexico. The design was to use the natural curves of human movement and use of space. Cost and materials were optimized to accomodate 5-6 people in a cabin of under 30 m2 of built up area. To reduce costs the project was designed to be built with inexperienced participant labor in a workshop setting; a majority of the cabin was to be built in a week. The clients were to host a group of participants, provide them with food and hospitality for the week of the workshop. The architect’s experience as a mud mason and a trainer was put to test, to guide inexperienced “participants” to build a complex form. The project was thus divided into three phases. The pre workshop, where the foundations and brick walls built by the client. Materials were sourced locally for the workshop and publicity done to find the 18 participants who would pay about 360 USD each for the workshop. The second stage is the one week intensive “mud building workshop” organized and hosted by the client. The challenge was to build about 50m2 of complex vaulting in 6 days. The clients then, post workshop; were to complete the structure as time, taste and means permitted. Though currently incomplete, the cabin was first rented out in Feb 2018. Cost and time of building can be reduced drastically when there are a minimum number of assemblies in building. A single vaulted roof over a space reduces a building to a single system or method of construction. Be it a bird, a bear or an ant, the whole structure is a result of a single, repetitive, intuitive action. When the complications in construction are reduced to one task, the learning curve to build a structure is shorter. This gives the amateur participant to focus, connect with oneself and quickly reach the intuitive aspects of a technique. Handmade country fired bricks come with a slight variation in thickness and size due to its uneven shrinkage and its level of firing in the oven. This greatly affects the method of construction. Attention was initially brought to the selection of the right brick, understanding its position and angle, observing the body's posture to exert the exact amount of pressure needed to align the brick in its rightful place. Over time, the attention required reduces and the mind enters into a meditative rhythm. In this state, the body does not tire, even for a person who isnt used to the strenuous work of building. A personal method quickly evolves in every individual. This is where the amateur quickly gains advantage over a seasoned professional, there is little necessity of demanding rigor, discipline or even acquired skill. Over the practice of a couple of days, everyone starts to work in coordination quite effortlessly. Little words are spoken, a teammates next need is understood with little communication. In the typical team of three, the first supplies the right brick and observes the curve from a distance. The second applies the right amount of mortar on the right sides while observing the brick course placement sidewise. The third places the brick in place with the right pressure observing and perfecting the placement with the help of the other two. All three members have to be connected deeply with the curve for each brick. Working in a team becomes a delight. The way the form is built also should afford a maximum number of people working at the same time. The design of courses is such that there is a combination of horizontal and vertical courses obiliges 6 teams of 3 to work simultaneously. It is a necessary condition for one curve to start above the other, this way the whole group finds a common rhythm. This stitching of courses is a great structural method. The forces of the three curves work together adding to the stability of the structure. This stability allows for a larger margin of human error. This allowance adds a distinct character to the structure, preserving the memory of the building activity. Every course of brick unique and distinct, yet collectively giving the structure its form. The architect-trainer continually supervises and orchestrates the precision, within allowable limits of security. Four main lessons are learnt by each participant in the course of the workshop. Design and is not a creative solution of a rational process, it is something that engages human intuition. Construction should not limit us with the need of money, experience, availability of tools, skill, training but rather an act that engages human intuition with whatever is available. Community building is not a mutual compromise of our rational differences but rather a product of our collective intuitions. We have much to learn from traditional societies, everything is done at a decent pace, made to last, everything is done with care, respect and love. In every action there is a sacred process.
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Who designed Cabin for Casa Naomin?+
Cabin for Casa Naomin was designed by India. It is located in Sierra de Santa Rosa de lima, Guanajuato, GTO, Mexico.
Where is Cabin for Casa Naomin located?+
Cabin for Casa Naomin is located in Sierra de Santa Rosa de lima, Guanajuato, GTO, Mexico. Its coordinates are 21.1471°, -101.6409°.
Can I visit Cabin for Casa Naomin?+
Cabin for Casa Naomin is a real building in Sierra de Santa Rosa de lima, Guanajuato, GTO that can be viewed from the outside. Check local information for interior access and visiting hours. Use the Parametric Atlas walking tour feature to plan a route that includes this building.