How Africans invented air conditioning long before electricity existed

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  • Опубликовано: 10 май 2023
  • For the longest time I have wondered and been confused as to why most African traditional homes and architecture in general did not have windows. I was concerned about ventilation and air circulation so I started digging and the discoveries I have made are unbelievable!
    National Geographic Article: Benefits of mud architecture
    www.nationalgeographic.com/en...
    CONTACT DETAILS: worldculturelove@gmail.com
    Instagram: / seenewafrica
    Email: africantraditionalarchitecture@gmail.com
    #TheVillage #africanarchitecture #mudhouses

Комментарии • 790

  • @sinothizitha1280
    @sinothizitha1280 Год назад +100

    They may look primitive to some. However, they are a masterpiece.
    They are never too cold in the winter and are cool in the summer.

    • @joelhungerford8388
      @joelhungerford8388 Год назад

      They look primitive cos they are

    • @adisianyapascal568
      @adisianyapascal568 Год назад +19

      They don’t look primitive

    • @victoriapowell6318
      @victoriapowell6318 Год назад +5

      I know that's right. I think "cool in the summer" may be a matter of perspective and geography.

    • @sinothizitha1280
      @sinothizitha1280 Год назад +10

      @@victoriapowell6318 I talk from experience coming from Sub Saharan Africa.

    • @moremiaj4786
      @moremiaj4786 Год назад +5

      which winter? we arent talking about amsterdam. This is AFRICA!

  • @AntonsClass
    @AntonsClass Год назад +103

    Modern building design in Africa needs to incorporate more sustainable practices for naturally ventilating and cooling our homes. Many modern homes don't consider natural cooling or ventilation at all. Thanks for sharing this info!

    • @lagringa7518
      @lagringa7518 Год назад +6

      Yes... and another thing I've noticed is that they don't often consider a little thing like orientation or how important planting for shade outside in the hot months as well.

    • @mouhalo
      @mouhalo Год назад +5

      @@lagringa7518 Senegalese architect here, Look up people like Francis Kere he is my inspiration and does buildings like no body else . I think his style and others alike are the future of african architecture

    • @marygitihaable
      @marygitihaable 4 месяца назад +1

      @@mouhaloI love his work!

  • @prospektarty1513
    @prospektarty1513 Год назад +55

    The thing is that we are obsessed with borrowing Western concepts and ways that we forget that a lot of traditional African stuff can be further developed and adapted into modern day concepts for sustainable living. For instance Africans are obsessed with using cement based concrete as their primary building material in an environment that is way too hot for such material to be naturally comfortable as a result many homes are like furnaces and require constant air conditioning to keep them cool

    • @queenwere1
      @queenwere1 Год назад

      Nobody wants to believe that the square shaped houses we're building today are spiritual traps! Our circular structures were inspired by the God

    • @user-nd5ud7bh3j
      @user-nd5ud7bh3j Год назад +2

      Is that why they are so ahead of us there in all measurable aspects of architecture? Lol

    • @rxtsukii
      @rxtsukii Год назад +2

      ​@@user-nd5ud7bh3jThey are ahead where it matters.....birth rates😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @loriannrichardson7644
      @loriannrichardson7644 Год назад +17

      @@user-nd5ud7bh3j It seems they've long been ahead. Here in the States a week-long workshops on building this way costs thousands of dollars.
      Africans were right all along -- efficient, functional, and sustainable.

    • @crystalsplace7163
      @crystalsplace7163 Год назад +1

      @@loriannrichardson7644 Exactly.

  • @placeofvalue
    @placeofvalue Год назад +76

    Thanks, Africa doesn't need western lifestyle in Africa to move forward. Construction must be built through the eyes of Africa culture.

    • @bobbobbly7900
      @bobbobbly7900 Год назад +1

      go for it then ,,live in mud huts ,who cares ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,if it's so great why do you all want to live in western civilised countries.......maybe mud huts aren't that great

    • @thegomillionairemindset6719
      @thegomillionairemindset6719 Год назад +2

      Facts

    • @gabrielgabriel5177
      @gabrielgabriel5177 Год назад

      Its still strange why so many africans leave theirs countries and risk their lives for to go to europe. I mean if it is so good in africa why go to bad europe?

    • @sundrapoonan6724
      @sundrapoonan6724 10 месяцев назад +3

      I completely agree ❤

    • @nicobakang9631
      @nicobakang9631 3 месяца назад +2

      infact that's just how every community does

  • @yakzivz1104
    @yakzivz1104 Год назад +45

    another issues is that earth materials are actually the best insulators from extreme temps. The actual soil is an incredible insulating material.

    • @sinothizitha1280
      @sinothizitha1280 Год назад +9

      The grass alone is a good insulator, hence it retaians a uniform temperature in the house.
      Together with the mud walls, its a potent combination.

    • @OhHapppyDaay
      @OhHapppyDaay Год назад +1

      My cat told me that.

    • @WapajeaWalksOnWater
      @WapajeaWalksOnWater Год назад +4

      ​@@sinothizitha1280 I'm frim the U.S., I ask my god father in Nigeria to build me a mud house for when I come to visit, he said no, because people will think I'm crazy. Till this day, I'm still pushing for my clay house. The cement block houses there, are miserably hot. I will have my clay house

    • @sinothizitha1280
      @sinothizitha1280 Год назад +4

      @@WapajeaWalksOnWater Build that hut, Buld that hut, build that hut. Lol.

    • @WapajeaWalksOnWater
      @WapajeaWalksOnWater Год назад

      😄😁🥰💖

  • @ufundi1
    @ufundi1 Год назад +146

    Excellent video! We as Africans need to cherish and expand upon our own ancient ingenuity.

    • @PopCultureCarnivore1
      @PopCultureCarnivore1 Год назад +4

      Black Americans will say they created it though🤣

    • @phillipbrown1467
      @phillipbrown1467 Год назад

      @@PopCultureCarnivore1 African food is gross.

    • @ufundi1
      @ufundi1 Год назад

      @@PopCultureCarnivore1 An American is a descendant of a white settler colonist. The term Black American is an oxymoron. It's new term. The Africans forcibly transported to the United States were just that: Africans. The term BA is goofy term. The descendants of forcibly migrated Africans are still there (... in the millions: ~50 million). There were no BAs in Africa long ago. Africans did create the 'porch' in terms of architecture that was embraced in the southern part of the United States.

    • @phill__6239
      @phill__6239 Год назад +6

      @@PopCultureCarnivore1 where do you think black americans came from, they have the same ancient ancestors

    • @pharaohbtw
      @pharaohbtw Год назад +4

      Dude. When we say we African Americans that means we come from Africa. You should be laughing at yourself.

  • @Lulu-wv1nt
    @Lulu-wv1nt Год назад +9

    Having being in an African hut.
    South Africa ❤🇿🇦
    It's so cool when it's hot and warm when it's cold.❤❤
    I love the ingenuity of Africans.

  • @uhurachezidek7674
    @uhurachezidek7674 Год назад +119

    This is what I was discussing. I think we need to learn and give more respect to the eco-friendly architectural skill. And like you said, innovate and expound on the ideas. But in a way that benefits our originators, not exploits them. Thank you so much for this statement.

  • @sumtendechaba9717
    @sumtendechaba9717 Год назад +109

    Nobody led this. We are too colonised to think of our great healthy heritages. Is the bigger reason we need to decolonise fast!

    • @KithEsq
      @KithEsq Год назад

      That's hilarious you will play he getting rid of china . You owe them billions. How the electricity over in Africa right now?

    • @jaronbalfour3711
      @jaronbalfour3711 Год назад +2

      Exactly Willie lynch and the making of a slave

    • @mikewilkins2030
      @mikewilkins2030 Год назад +4

      It’s high time we put off the color issue and come together as brothers as we are. The world is too forward thinking to be one race over another anymore. We need righteousness to cover the earth and come together and build together. This way of thinking is the only way! If we go your route it will end up exactly the same but a new oppressor! Let righteousness cover the face of thee earth like water covers the sea!

    • @sumtendechaba9717
      @sumtendechaba9717 Год назад

      @@mikewilkins2030 why is it that when African need to reclaim and build on their thing that is when the same melinated and oppressed will be talking about righteousness. Is it only Africans that should be righteous? Besides is Righteousness stupidity. All the righteous things we gave the world what did the do with it? The used to oppress and still oppressing us. So why are you still preaching this passivity. Bother I disagree with you. The earth can only be healthy again if the first born take charge of the earth again. Just see what they did with climate and every body is suffering it. So no! The melinated are spiritual people that is why we keep the world safe for this long despite the suffering caused us. Theirs Time is up let the learn to be human for ins and stop stealing to be at the top. We must not allow three D vibration telling five D vibration what to do. Time up!

    • @patalo299
      @patalo299 Год назад +1

      Ce n’est pas que vous êtes trop colonisés c’est juste que l’immense majorité des peuples africains n’avaient même pas d’écriture et étaient incapables de transmettre des informations sur plusieurs générations, (l’histoire commence quand l’écriture est inventée, avant ça c’est pas préhistoire)

  • @daniaa.oliva-pena7338
    @daniaa.oliva-pena7338 Год назад +13

    This architecture is amazing to me , I love it . The opening on the top was meant to look at the stars and the sky. I remember seeing that somewhere else .I think Egypt.

    • @beanabong2896
      @beanabong2896 Год назад +2

      I'm glad I wasn't the only one thinking that.

    • @TheVinci19
      @TheVinci19 Год назад +1

      Rome. Roman villas had atrium, on open space in the middle of the structure.

  • @omggiiirl2077
    @omggiiirl2077 Год назад +82

    I think lighting wasn't a priority because time and schedules back then conformed to nature, so artificial lighting wasn't needed beyond a fire on the outside or a small lamp on the inside. When you figure that most of these homes are in equatorial Africa it makes sense as there is enough bright daylight hours to get things done, unlike extreme north and south where daylight and night fluctuate throughout the year. Our ancestors built homes suited perfectly for the environment they lived in!

    • @angeladuhe8981
      @angeladuhe8981 Год назад +10

      Just think about true in-depth peacefulness at night❤Energetic and calming

    • @Peak_Stone
      @Peak_Stone Год назад +3

      How would they do things inside the house without lighting. Maybe these were storage buildings, because lighting has always been a priority for people, doesn't matter what time or country it is.

    • @omggiiirl2077
      @omggiiirl2077 Год назад +10

      @@Peak_Stone you didn't pay attention. In equatorial Africa, daylight is at an equal time as night, so you have plenty of time for light in side the house. As seen in the video, the opening in the top allowed for smoke to escape, but it also allowed plenty of light in, so during the day no artificial light is needed. At night you just need a small lamp or the embers of a fire, as most people sleep at that time. Especially back then, time schedules didn't run as they did as now. Even the calendar was different.

    • @Peak_Stone
      @Peak_Stone Год назад +2

      @@omggiiirl2077 I am saying houses benefit from Windows. It doesn't matter what year it is, or which part of the earth you are from. It doesn't make sense to make such huge buildings as houses, because you will have little light in them, which is not useful for everyday stuff, like finding a spoon, pans, knitting etc.
      I think you are wrong about houses not needing light because it's in Africa. Light is useful, and essential in daytime and night time. These buildings probably serve another function than housing, hence little lighting.

    • @omggiiirl2077
      @omggiiirl2077 Год назад +9

      ​@@Peak_Stone but people clearly are still living in these houses. Did you not watch the video?😂😂😂😂 Just because it doesn't work in the western way doesn't mean it doesn't work. It works for them. And Africa isn't the only place with homes without windows. There the hale pili in Hawai'i the igloo of Inuit and Eskimo culture, even Sāmoa ho,es didn't have windows, but at the same time they didn't have walls, even in the Pacific island of Anita the homes were low and had no windows and when night came these people used a fire or a lamp by various means. Even the mongols and Turkic people lived in yurts, didn't have windows, they used animal fat lamps for light. But again most people didn't stay out deep into the night they stayed inside. It wasn't smart. In most of these places still it could be deadly. Bright artificial light such as street lights are recent needs for production and safety reasons, but in the past and in societies that are less developed it's not a requirement.

  • @OK-pi6fq
    @OK-pi6fq Год назад +4

    termites do this shape for the same reason. They use towers and funnel shapes and openings in a way to divert air and both keep the air clean, but also for temperature control. This was a great article. Thanks for sharing

    • @simplybeautiful9021
      @simplybeautiful9021 Год назад +1

      This must be one of the best responses I have seen here

    • @WokeandProud
      @WokeandProud 11 месяцев назад +1

      Not surprising that humans would copy from nature to built thier tech nature is the best teacher.

  • @Remembernukpunuk
    @Remembernukpunuk Год назад +42

    Your mindset is glorious 🌟. The way these architects and construction contractors look at you when you say "I want mud". The school system has always been our issue. A British colonial remainant - where they still worship concrete and burned clay bricks made by burning down medicinal trees. I remember a documentary on American homes. There was some crazy statistic on the cost of heating a cooling with electricity - it's very backwards. Slowly slowly though Africans are, on mass, reclaiming lost knowledge in all walks of human interactivity. Great vid!

    • @matthewpettway3864
      @matthewpettway3864 Год назад +3

      Thank you for your enthusiasm! I am an African-American professor teaching Latin American literature and cultural studies. I start my classes with examples of African sovereignty or the struggle for said sovereignty said sovereignty. I believe but Africans can teach blacks in the diaspora a plethora about languages, architecture, traditional medicinal science and the translation of Ajami manuscripts.
      And we have a plethora of things to offer❤.

    • @KarlKarsnark
      @KarlKarsnark Год назад +4

      "....a British Colonial remnant"....like the language you're using right now? ;) LOL!

    • @Remembernukpunuk
      @Remembernukpunuk Год назад +3

      @@KarlKarsnark good one 😜. But no actually 🤔

    • @skidan4real
      @skidan4real Год назад +2

      @@KarlKarsnarkyes the bastard language a lot of the world use because of slavery and colonialism.

    • @yungmentalproblems
      @yungmentalproblems Год назад +2

      These comments salty asf lol maybe you should've had written language

  • @paulokeke8337
    @paulokeke8337 Год назад +31

    I love how you kept saying pyramid. The West said we don't have any connection with ancient Egypt but here we still have tradition and cultures scattered all over sub-Sahara Africa that predates ancient Kemet/Egypt.
    It's also clear our predecessors used materials available in the tropics to build after migration. Like using clay and timber unlike the stones and rock in the arid and desert regions of Africa. I'm from the igbo tribe in Nigeria, and they were pyramid in Nsude Enugu. Thanks for the elaborate info. As an architect, I've started picking an interest in remodeling indigenous designs.

    • @mongikazip
      @mongikazip Год назад

      The new species of mankind stay stealing from the original people of the Most High

    • @kayef5724
      @kayef5724 Год назад

      The west isn't wrong, lot of fake history with an agenda going on.

    • @SvendleBerries
      @SvendleBerries Год назад

      These Arnt pyramids though. They're cones. A building shape every culture on Earth created on their own for thousands of years.

    • @paulokeke8337
      @paulokeke8337 Год назад +2

      @@SvendleBerries I’m talking about something else. Read

    • @yourdad1675
      @yourdad1675 Год назад +2

      A LOT of ancient civilizations built pyramids primarily Native Americans. Doesn't mean all are related

  • @arronhaggerty8426
    @arronhaggerty8426 Год назад +11

    Its like a giant termite mound

    • @georgsteidl2249
      @georgsteidl2249 2 месяца назад

      yes really :) I think they had equalizing ventilation

  • @omobanedo9602
    @omobanedo9602 Год назад +21

    Very correct, in the US, the road management system in all cities of America uses domed shape storage to preserve salt for the winter. So, when driving on roads and you see domed-shaped storage buildings, they are made for preserving salt in America!
    Thanks for this information, wow, wow, wow, Africa has been ahead of the inventions before the Western countries, proud, proud, proud as an African.

    • @CDN_Store
      @CDN_Store Год назад +1

      Same here in the UK. Was even thinking the designs for the buildings in some of the concepts for colonies on the Moon and Mars look like these buildings.

    • @omobanedo9602
      @omobanedo9602 Год назад +1

      @@CDN_Store Thanks for this added information, I really appreciate it.

  • @helgaioannidis9365
    @helgaioannidis9365 Год назад +21

    When we were building our house here in Greece I was doing research on possibilities of cooling the house during summer without the need of electricity. So I found out about African and Arabic building techniques that are brilliant. Always have been wondering why modern architecture doesn't use those.

    • @pearls1626
      @pearls1626 Год назад +11

      Because they don’t care about us or the environment.

    • @ugwuanyicollins6136
      @ugwuanyicollins6136 Год назад

      Colonialism is thing hello

    • @helgaioannidis9365
      @helgaioannidis9365 Год назад

      @@ugwuanyicollins6136 Greece was a colony, not a colonial power. Greeks were slaves.

    • @victorhopper6774
      @victorhopper6774 Год назад

      @@pearls1626 that is dumb

  • @arronhaggerty8426
    @arronhaggerty8426 Год назад +62

    Mud houses are like cement houses, durable, and last forever in a hot climate.

    • @astroprotector
      @astroprotector Год назад +3

    • @brandonjablasone7544
      @brandonjablasone7544 Год назад +15

      @craigdendy5762rain don’t effect them

    • @irenedavo3768
      @irenedavo3768 Год назад +8

      No they crumble and also wash away in floods!

    • @missqt48
      @missqt48 Год назад

      I find it amazing how only a few people can use common sense.
      Wash away in the rain
      Lumps of mud
      ??
      I’ve slept in a mud hut they are amazing and it was cool all night, whereas the outside was warm and hot. Africans are inventors of everything! We saw the earth and used it to our knowledge.

    • @Jay-rd3hn
      @Jay-rd3hn Год назад +15

      @craigdendy5762 rain don’t affect mud houses that are built by real architects who really knew how to build them.

  • @beyou-tvision
    @beyou-tvision Год назад +27

    Other indigenous people also use the cone or dome shape in building housing. For example, the Native Americans and Mongols built teepees, and Eskimos made igloos. Yerts are also similar.
    I think many more aspects of indigenous living would go a long way to improve our "modern" lives. Simply put, to live in harmony with the environment and animals rather than seeing it as something to dominate and control for profit. There would be no need for profit as the Earth cares for all of its inhabitants abundantly if we would allow it.

  • @Thetruepredictor
    @Thetruepredictor Год назад +5

    This dome... This dome is everywhere, reminds me of tartarian architecture all over the world before the reset.

  • @88g40
    @88g40 Год назад +4

    Our ancestors were futuristic and very intelligent.

  • @joesinegal8167
    @joesinegal8167 Год назад +8

    What An Absolutely Gorgeous And Brilliant Design! Western Nations Are Responsible For Marginalizing African Knowledge, Culture And Brilliance!
    Thank You For The Wonderful Video! A Shout Out From Your Brother In Northern California, USA! Love, Peace And Blessings To You, Your Family And Our Lovely Motherland! 💯🙏♥️🙏

    • @irenedavo3768
      @irenedavo3768 Год назад

      Do you know about Jigger Victims?

    • @VereDeVere
      @VereDeVere Год назад

      Always playing the victim. African countries have been independent for over half a century, but you are still crying about how evil westerners marginalised them! As if 50+ years wasn't more than enough time to counter any marginalisation (much of which only happened in the heads of people like you). Ridiculous.

  • @obohphilips5371
    @obohphilips5371 Год назад +11

    This information is so powerful. As an Africans historians, I'm very proud of your work and this research work.
    I've always tell myself, that Africans architects has not done enough to tap into our African Designs from our ancestors. They left us with such a wide knowledge of information in architectural designs that fits perfectly well into our Africa environment.
    Perhaps, there should be an African architectural schools who specialise in training a new generation of Africans architecture about African indigenous architectural designs.
    Kudos to you my dear sister. Well done. We will be using your videos as educational purpose.

  • @loriannrichardson7644
    @loriannrichardson7644 Год назад +6

    I agree with you whole-heartedly. Also, this knowledge is not hidden -- many in Africa still build this way. I've seen videos of African women building homes on you tube.

  • @brentdobson5264
    @brentdobson5264 10 месяцев назад +3

    😮How very very satisfying it must be to sculpt architecture with your own hands directly from the Earth ❤ .

  • @CathodeRayNipplez
    @CathodeRayNipplez Год назад +6

    The irony that much of Africa still doesn't have electricity or air conditioning isn't lost on me.

    • @Lulu-wv1nt
      @Lulu-wv1nt Год назад +4

      Not all of Africa is extremely hot so air conditioning is not needed.
      Electricity distribution depends on that country.
      A country like South Africa has electricity in villages.

  • @t._harpe4651
    @t._harpe4651 Год назад +9

    Thanks for This Info my Sister.....These are Beautiful Homes and Smart Designs...Africa is #1✊🏽

    • @marcellogenesi6390
      @marcellogenesi6390 Год назад +1

      The Trulli in the region of Puglie in Italy, have been built since any one can remember and they are still lived to day, they produce the same effect. There is no evidence to suggest that they copied any one, as they were built that shape for other reasons well.

    • @Ghostintthemachine
      @Ghostintthemachine Год назад +1

      Marcelo stop, nothing in Italy is original. Stop trying to take the credit away from Africa for the brilliant culture it has shed upon the rest of the world. The Moors brought so much to Southern Italy and the Pugile region is very much in the southern part of Italy. Nice try

    • @marcellogenesi6390
      @marcellogenesi6390 Год назад

      @@Ghostintthemachine The trulli were built by local people who knew nothing about Africa, they probably never heard of Africa. You know nothing about Italy, the only thing that the moors brought to Italy was costal raid, killing of civilians, destruction, pilige, abducting white girls and woman as slaves, they were blood thirsty and uncivilised , with nothing to offer. Italy learned nothing from them. Muslims squatted in Sicily for 200 years. but not in Puglie, thankfully they were kicked out by the Normans. I have no idea where you come from , but one thing I am certain of, that is that in your schools the curriculum (Latin) does not include anything about Italy, so don't even think of lecturing me about my country.

    • @importantvideos4529
      @importantvideos4529 Год назад

      ::Face-palm. 🤡🤡🤡

  • @keithstevens5614
    @keithstevens5614 Год назад +8

    Except air circulation is not air conditioning. Here you're just directing draft from one opening to the other. At the top wind blows faster so you will increase force of the draft at the bottom.

    • @IOdele
      @IOdele 2 месяца назад

      The building itself is a system that creates a cooling and stack effect, thereby conditioning the interior air. Air conditioning is just defined as a means of controlling the humidity, temperature and ventilation within a building. These structures did that exact thing passively with no extra energy input, hence its more sustainable.

    • @keithstevens5614
      @keithstevens5614 2 месяца назад

      @@IOdele You're not causing air to compress then expand drawing in heat from the surroundings as air expands. Instead you're just creating draft.

    • @IOdele
      @IOdele 2 месяца назад

      @@keithstevens5614 yes that’s how an AC unit works, but the principal is the same. Stack effect creates a pressure difference cold air with a higher pressure sinks and hot air with low pressure rises, simulating circulation

    • @keithstevens5614
      @keithstevens5614 2 месяца назад

      @@IOdele ok, sure

  • @michioaluna5799
    @michioaluna5799 Год назад +3

    Smart lady I always thought of expanding on the African architecture to improve lighting, materials and ventilation.

  • @elatoomagakaikilekofe
    @elatoomagakaikilekofe Год назад +18

    absolutely 💯 💯love your work 👏 look forward to learn more 👍 about the true meaning of African people , culture and brilliant architectural minds❤ Malo lava from your Polynesian sister❤

    • @supaclipz
      @supaclipz Год назад

      Yes are of the same linage the Polynesian and African. Good to see you joining sister. Spread the world and let's build together.

  • @lazorajones7748
    @lazorajones7748 Год назад +3

    The structure are not only beautiful works of art, but beautifully funtional and innovative.

  • @simplyizustic6122
    @simplyizustic6122 Год назад +3

    There is a correlation between the poor lightening and the fact that Africans are one of the most social groups you will ever find. Our fore fathers hardly spent time indoors to worry about the lightening.

    • @mudhouses
      @mudhouses  Год назад

      This is by far one of the best explanations I have received. I am just about to publish a video on how African villages and the lifestyle they promote helped to promote social well-being and prevent loneliness, social anxiety, and much more. The power of the community and knowing you did not have to do life alone had such an impact, and we are slowly losing that sadly

  • @couponnation
    @couponnation Год назад +4

    Dome homes would be much more durable, safe, and economical over conventional wood frame houses that are made today.

  • @andrewsakutombo2804
    @andrewsakutombo2804 Год назад +1

    I feel proud that a young African woman is egger and proud of her heritage and wants to promote it. I would want to encourage you to do more research and even document your findings. Be truly blessed

  • @j.bright6802
    @j.bright6802 Год назад +6

    Are there books or authors you recommend about African architecture?

  • @Untilitpases
    @Untilitpases Год назад +2

    The world would be so wonderful if different cultures preserved or developed further their different building and even aesthetics/decoration styles. It would feel surreal, like a movie set. Imagine a bank looking like that.

  • @michaelstorto8658
    @michaelstorto8658 Год назад +7

    Beautiful, incredibly instructing presentation, I agree totally with your comments. It is crucial to implement traditional - eco construction, as we run great danger to loose such environmentally economic ways to buiild in these modern days. Great thank you

  • @davido3109
    @davido3109 Год назад +4

    I like The domes and the cal earth style...
    Thanks for giving back our Afro diasporans the knowledge of architecture.
    Talking about indigenous peoples.. in Mexico there's a place called Azulic that maybe you would like to see...
    Namaste Haribol Asewe

    • @davido3109
      @davido3109 Год назад

      m.ruclips.net/video/2jW7o60uCTM/видео.html&pp=ygUMYXp1bGlrIGRvbWVz
      Azulik

  • @MaLiArtworks186
    @MaLiArtworks186 Год назад +2

    Rammed Earth homes are beautiful!

  • @CliveBarnettrecluse
    @CliveBarnettrecluse Год назад +2

    Heat and light generally travel together. You may be able to tweak a little but in general, you can't have one without the other.

  • @alfredhyates5474
    @alfredhyates5474 Год назад +1

    Very informative and I shared your video with my Architect cousin in Barbados...these are the types of dwellings I would certainly consider when planning my home.

  • @obeahman6286
    @obeahman6286 Год назад +1

    I am particularly fascinated by thatch roofs. Cannot see how water does not get through. Its beautiful!

  • @Lulu-wv1nt
    @Lulu-wv1nt Год назад +3

    This is what you would call sustainable living and living off the grid.
    Living with nature instead of against it

    • @adamasalawan971
      @adamasalawan971 Год назад

      That's exactly the problem: when whites live with nature, its called self sustaining and living off the grid. When Africans do it, we get called backwards

  • @timothymitchell8310
    @timothymitchell8310 Год назад +12

    These are works of art! Between the ziggurat of Ur or the pyramids of Sudan and Egypt , all the tepee shaped structures found in Russia and the US including igloos. Inca pyramids found in central and South America . It’s amazing that this construction style used all over the world using mud , wood animal skins, clay mud and sand , earth technology is tremendous even today when you build a rammed Earth type of house you build in a spiral pattern building up like that kind of domed shape and even for a simple beehives way back in the 17 and 1800’s the beehives for you primarily skip baskets there was Wolverine in a spiral shape , some are even 3D printed on a large scale . I’ve watched several tribes building these same shapes out of bamboo. I have subscribed and am looking forward to more. Maybe more color images with temperature sensors to show the average temperatures in the heat of summer or cool of their winters.

    • @lagringa7518
      @lagringa7518 Год назад

      I agree, they are gorgeous! We should always learn from our forefathers, centuries produced the height of practicality from local available materials which then evolved into a thing of beauty.

  • @user-qy2yw5ed3d
    @user-qy2yw5ed3d Год назад +2

    Centuries ago in England, if you had windows you had to pay a tax.
    Legislators have had English peasants nailed down for longer than you would think possible........ and they`re still turning the screw.

  • @kiing7269
    @kiing7269 Год назад +16

    You’re adorable. The top of the huts that have holes are incomplete. Our ancestors knew how to create glass (durrh because they built with mud, painted buildings with tree ash, and made sculptures with precious metals). That glass was shaped as a circular pyramid (ie. pointed top circular bottom) and was applied at that top of the hut and was always thick. This thick glass amplifies sunlight within the hut without adding much to its heat, the glasses also had inscriptions and markings that helped to tell the time with sunlight and moonlight, and the time of the year through the position of the Sun. Some other cultures had geometrical designs in circular format on the floor as calendars and clocks, so when the sunlight and moonlight are hitting these carvings and designs, they’re basically telling the time. Yesss the African people of way back then; knew how the solar system worked. They even noticed when after a few hundred or thousand years; the Sun shifted or moved significantly in the Milky Way. This allowed them to do major renovations in the cities and kingdom, to accommodate the astronomical changes. Moments before the Sun came up, they had a clock called Dew Counter that works until the Sun comes up to dry everything, they also had a similar one for rainy days. If I want to explain it in a way you’d understand; imagine very thin paper stacked on top each other with mathematically precise spaces, once a drop falls on one of them, it tears. Then another drop on another paper then it tears. For a specific number of tears makes an hour, and the angled roofing of the clocks that makes the dew drop is different from the angle of the roofing of the clock used on rainy days due to the frequency of both water drops, with their surfaces purposely smoothened or altered to set a specific pace for these water drops. It’s soooo complicated I can’t finish this topic if I wanted to. I’d have to make a presentation that would only bore some to death.
    Also they had pools with dials that used the reflection of the Sun plus the tectonic movements of the Earth to tell the time. It’s fire 🔥.

    • @kiing7269
      @kiing7269 Год назад +2

      Even basic clocks like water dials which uses the drops of water into a vessel with markings (ie. Clepsydras) to measure hours and seconds. They could tell how many seconds have passed by measuring the liter of water that made up the hour. Bruh I’m blown away.

    • @fetusbuddha3908
      @fetusbuddha3908 Год назад

      Would love to learn more about what you speak of

    • @beanabong2896
      @beanabong2896 Год назад +4

      "Adorable", that was unnecessarily condescending 😒

    • @TheVinci19
      @TheVinci19 Год назад

      the only evidence of glass fabrication in Africa have been found in Nigeria, and dated about XI-XV century. The opening on the roof was necessary to let the hot air going out, with a glass cork, people inside would have been slowly cooked

  • @cgsather3309
    @cgsather3309 Год назад

    Thanks for one of the best videos on African architecture. I researched the African hut for a project once, and you show material that I haven’t seen before. This building type is a magnificent example of how ingenuity can achieve so much with very little, while treading lightly and staying in harmony with nature. Often, African huts rise to the level of sculptural art, like the ones on your thumbnail. But I found out they have been woefully under documented, and I hope that the current generation of academics and practitioners will fill that gap, in response to the rising interest around the world to learn from an ancient practice that has withstood unadulterated the test of time. It’s one of the best examples of sustainability.

  • @dyana3965
    @dyana3965 Год назад +3

    Thank you for sharing this wonderful knowledge. I have been in an earth built home and it was so cool and the air quality was so excellent I did not want to leave.

  • @ChiefCopperTone
    @ChiefCopperTone Год назад

    This was a part of my Architectural Masters Thesis. Great video sister!!

  • @WhattEvery
    @WhattEvery Год назад +1

    The roundness of African houses all keeps then cooler, compared to squared houses. The sunshine is severer on the later!

  • @westwild75
    @westwild75 Год назад +1

    Tunisia 🇹🇳... North Africa🌍 approves this message...

  • @sherineclarke8292
    @sherineclarke8292 Год назад

    Thank you so much for sharing your analysis. I loved the soundtrack and purchased it immediately so it was wonderful to learn the details of the pieces.
    Wonderful to know about the opera singer❤

  • @josephinencho5486
    @josephinencho5486 Месяц назад

    We need people like you to teach in our African schools

  • @danielmaina4942
    @danielmaina4942 Год назад +1

    I looooooove seeing glimpses of african civilisations. Thank you sister !

  • @chefafricasvillage4209
    @chefafricasvillage4209 Год назад +1

    Excellent video. I look forward to seeing more of these videos especially as many persons want an off grid lifestyle and their homes must be comfortable and healthy for happiness. Thank you.

  • @pearls1626
    @pearls1626 Год назад +5

    The Sidama people of Ethiopia are famous for their beautiful bamboo-woven houses known as tuguls.
    The tugul-known world-wide as the Ethiopian House-is a dome-shaped building with a small front porch shading the entrance.
    The building frame is made of locally available bamboo and covered with grass and ensete* leaves.
    Tuguls are specifically designed to protect their inhabitants during rainy seasons at the Sidama Zone.
    They have pointed tops and circular bodies that shed heavy rainfall away and prevent leaking.

  • @timbuk2.019
    @timbuk2.019 Год назад +2

    That's sustainable building with small footprint it's not cutting down forrest. We were Living/building in harmony with creation. You don't need a mansion where you don't use half of the house

  • @hyacinthjarrett8637
    @hyacinthjarrett8637 3 месяца назад

    With such climate inventing and the installation of some form of ventilation and cooling methods on the continent makes perfect sense to me.
    This why modern museums, films and books are vital parts of the retention and passing on content's regarding our roots and contributiond to our future generations.

  • @MrAsharrison
    @MrAsharrison Год назад +1

    This was awesome! We need to the old ways into the future because they were the most beneficial for our people.

  • @Highflyer10
    @Highflyer10 Год назад +4

    Amazing video🤩 . We need to bring our ancestral architecture and combine them with CAD, materials, then develop.

  • @gtiggsmusicstudent
    @gtiggsmusicstudent Год назад +1

    Loved your work. Just subscribed.

  • @samantha6670
    @samantha6670 Год назад

    EXCELLENT. Let's rediscover our AFRICAN ARCHITECTURE and learn from it.

  • @moremiaj4786
    @moremiaj4786 Год назад +2

    Right now in West Africa, with the european style cement houses, when you enter a nigerian home, the heat that will assail you is almost murderous. The houses built now in africa are european style homes that are good for european weather.

  • @bicycles-as-far-as-im-aliv5725
    @bicycles-as-far-as-im-aliv5725 Год назад +4

    I love this. I really do ❤it. I also like u touching on modern urban planning & design - especially since our ppl like to copy the west (trying to import the ideas of urban sprawl in Africa cities & villages). Thank u so much for this video. I subscribed already

  • @Chesa5
    @Chesa5 Год назад

    This is an inspiring and thought-provoking video. I love the challenge. I am thinking about my next home to be designed by an Alkebulan with an Alkebulan touch. Thanks for such information.

  • @african-history-fountain
    @african-history-fountain 3 месяца назад

    Beautiful, excellent video. Thanks for this work.

  • @ncubesays
    @ncubesays Год назад +8

    For an example of modern African architecture of a building that self-regulates heat, look up Eastgate Centre in Harare, Zimbabwe. What's really cool is that it was constructed in the 1990s before sustainable architecture had become a buzzword.

  • @premlatamahale3256
    @premlatamahale3256 Год назад +1

    Africans, Eskimos, and Indian homes ancient construction till date are warm in winter snd cool in summer👍👍👍🙏

  • @DarthObscurity
    @DarthObscurity Год назад +1

    Video should be called "How every civilization invented air COOLING (conditioning implies drawing out moisture) before electricity -existed- (was harnessed. electricity has literally existed since the start of the universe)"

  • @originsdecoded3508
    @originsdecoded3508 Год назад +2

    Very fascinating. our ancestors obviously mastered their environments and we are just now starting to realize they were much more intelligent then what we give credit for

  • @TheNarmerPalette
    @TheNarmerPalette Год назад

    I think this is a great video. Very informative. I love our African Architecture.

  • @violettabicycletta331
    @violettabicycletta331 Год назад +1

    Invented air conditioning without realising it ! Just so happened that their natural shelters were perfect for their needs !

  • @SevenDeMagnus
    @SevenDeMagnus Год назад

    Cool architecture african friends.
    God bless.

  • @IAMmyMOTHERandFATHER
    @IAMmyMOTHERandFATHER Год назад +1

    Excellent ideas. Thanks.

  • @fatoomgierdien110
    @fatoomgierdien110 Год назад +1

    Fascinating and interesting!!
    Beautiful architecture. Cape Town ❤️ thanks.

  • @rahelbekafa6912
    @rahelbekafa6912 Год назад +1

    Thank you 🙏🏿 for this beautiful information

  • @weymouthesterhuizen1145
    @weymouthesterhuizen1145 Год назад

    This is supa dope. Thank you. Love our continent and a fantastic legacy to be kept. Loving it! Agree agree agree. Nicely done.

    • @livingfaith9189
      @livingfaith9189 Год назад

      Wow you boers do not get it do you? You cant read the room that its native african spaces you invade always... Africans are not srupid... they know you are not of them. You people need to respect boundaries

  • @kennethklein6213
    @kennethklein6213 Месяц назад

    With due respect, I believe the first issue favoring the use of the dome shape pertains to meeting the demands of the rainy season and the dry season. In some locals the home is primarily used for sleeping or as shelter from significant rain storms. The lack of windows is partly to save on cost and keeping the structure strong. The temperature difference inside and outside is very significant.

  • @ImaginaryWear
    @ImaginaryWear Год назад +1

    Wowww… thank you for this video. I’m always I mean always learning and I never knew that dome/pyramid shaped structures have this capability. Thank you, I appreciate you Sis 🙏🏽

  • @MemoGrafix
    @MemoGrafix Год назад +1

    I've have some of these pictures.
    I have this in My mind to build one of My homes here in USA this shape _(with windows on side of course)._ I had in mind a circular stationary Sky-Light. I will research more of how to utilize an opening sky-Light on top of dome for circulation.
    I had no knowledge this shape is conducive to cooling, due to of course heat rises.
    Thanks for putting this information on RUclips.

  • @thepipedreamer89
    @thepipedreamer89 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for putting out all this info.

  • @eccoluisaluisa
    @eccoluisaluisa 9 месяцев назад +1

    Admirable way of adaptation at the environment! We need to reduplicate it nowadays, allover the world!

  • @robertafierro5592
    @robertafierro5592 Год назад +2

    In the 1970's in New York City, there was a Trend going around called Pyramid Power..

  • @nabiln656
    @nabiln656 День назад

    I really love it, thank you it's very informative, actually I was myself wondering about the conic shape and searching about it, and the very experiment of apple under a hemisphere crossed my mind before I watch your video

  • @ranojutro426
    @ranojutro426 Год назад +2

    Lepenski vir civilization, Vinca civilization was making same pyramid houses 10 000 years ago, American Nativ people also Tippi, Northern people also.
    All of them used also mad ,dry grass for outside insulation.

  • @That_Freedom_Guy
    @That_Freedom_Guy Год назад

    Wow! Those buildings are wonderful. 😃

  • @illuminadi5848
    @illuminadi5848 Год назад

    Incredible video! Incredible!!! You just got a new subscriber.

  • @antoinettetyus5596
    @antoinettetyus5596 Год назад

    That’s what I would like to have energy efficient and the style, gorgeous consept

  • @genuinediasporan6661
    @genuinediasporan6661 Год назад +1

    Beautiful,unique and very innovative. ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @Rina-gtnuke1
    @Rina-gtnuke1 Год назад +2

    They also invented device's to harness electricity too.

    • @bobbobbly7900
      @bobbobbly7900 Год назад +1

      of course and aeroplanes and space ships and computers but then they forgot

    • @adamasalawan971
      @adamasalawan971 Год назад

      @@bobbobbly7900 Please dont come in here with that smart ass commentary.

  • @herintuion88
    @herintuion88 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing 🙏🏽🙏🏽

  • @wtchtower
    @wtchtower Год назад +1

    a dome shape house can a withstand strong wind more than a box shape structure. Aerodynamics
    And one thing more is about harmonic frequency of the structure itself which is beneficial to those who dwells in it.

  • @missbritt288
    @missbritt288 Год назад

    These type of designs were mentioned in the writings of the ancient Egyptians and were depicted in some of there drawings , when they came to the land of Punt present day somalia they said the people there lived in houses shaped like bee hives . This is an ancient and beautiful traditional architecture

  • @aidanmwombeki1683
    @aidanmwombeki1683 8 дней назад

    Less attention was paid to lighting because the houses were mostly used at night for rest and during bad weather for protection from the elements. In addition most activities happened outdoors hence limited time in the house.

  • @NuAege2302
    @NuAege2302 Месяц назад

    I grew up in the northwestern part of cameroon call Wum. As a kid, the villagers had mud houses with thatch roofs. I don't know why they abandoned the thatch in favour of corrugated zinc roofs. It was cool seeing that.

  • @juniornlondock
    @juniornlondock Год назад

    Such a great video ... Keep up the good work

  • @spykerhond7008
    @spykerhond7008 Год назад

    its so refreshing to find Africanism on youtube without the fairy tales. I subbed , i loved , i is addicted now.

  • @matthewhudson615
    @matthewhudson615 9 месяцев назад

    I think you have begun an architecture school here on youtube. Yes, we need to venture out to these rural architects and learn from them.

  • @nathanh3538
    @nathanh3538 Год назад

    i love the history and information

  • @stylesg7818
    @stylesg7818 Год назад +2

    I would add rammed earth as another sustaible option for us africans.
    Africa has a lot to teach but not heard in my opinion.