House-owner had agreed to the architect’s request to be given a free hand
A 1,200 sq. ft. house constructed in a week? “In fact,
it was six days of actual construction after basic foundation work,”
clarifies hotelier R. Adiga, the owner, amused to have witnessed his
home gaining shape in just about the time one would take on a business
trip across the Atlantic. “I walked in like a king. My architect offered
this house with one bedroom, dining, kitchen, bath, pooja with an open
entrance hall on a platter to me,” he says.
Mr.
Adiga’s farm house at Kanakapura was visualised in the third week of
July 2013, when he had casually expressed to his friend-architect that
he had missed building a farm house to celebrate his 50 birthday slated
for August 2013. “I will meet the target. Give me a free hand. I will
use gypsum boards and give you a house on August 1,” replied the
architect. The novelty seemed irresistible to Adiga who said ‘Cheers!’
“Gypsum,
a waste by-product of the fertiliser industry, is available in plenty.
It is commonly used for wall punning and putty. Gypsum boards for walls
have been used in several mass-housing projects, although lack of
awareness about its eco-friendly features has restricted its presence in
residential constructions,” says the chief architect of Adiga’s
farmhouse, requesting anonymity.
Pre-fabricated
gypsum boards also make economic sense for temporary structures, labour
colonies, construction site offices and model houses, flood and earth
quake ravaged sites and exhibition halls. “Using gypsum sensibly in
low-cost budgets helps in fast-track constructions and can balance
labour shortage,” says the architect, who heads a reputed 50-year-old
firm.
The technology used for Adiga came from
IIT-Chennai that houses a ‘two-storey gypsum model’ in its premises
along with roof slab and staircase. The model draws inspiration from the
original Australian technology much in vogue all over the world. The
best of construction chemicals available in the market today can help
nullify the effect of weather on gypsum and make it water and fungus
proof, says the architect.
For Adiga’s project,
gypsum wall and roofing boards with window cut-outs were brought
ready-made from Cochin, says the project co-ordinator. The outer walls
are of hollow gypsum boards of 20 cm width. They were filled with
concrete to make them burglary-proof. The 8-inch thick inner partition
walls are noise-proof, even without a concrete filling.
“Six
people started on the basic structure. By mid-week, nearly 45 people
were putting together almost everything from flooring, walls, electrical
fittings and plumbing round-the-clock. There is no plastering as gypsum
boards are ready to paint,” he says.
“We have given a 20-year guarantee on leaks,” assures the architect.
A
steel and concrete house would have cost about Rs. 20 lakh. Adiga saved
nearly 35 per cent on that. The savings included on steel (at the rate
of three kg/sq ft) and cement (about 75 per cent).
thanks to http://www.thehindu.com/news/cities/bangalore/1200-sq-ft-house-built-in-just-one-week/article6530702.ece?homepage=true&utm_source=MostPopular&utm_medium=Homepage&utm_campaign=WidgetPromo BANGALORE,
October 25, 2014
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