Toronto Star

Building blocks rise from rubble in disaster zones

Dutch group to repurpose debris into houses for victims displaced by catastroph­es

- JILLIAN KESTLER-D’AMOURS STAFF REPORTER

“Crushed debris in, Lego blocks out.”

That’s the idea behind the Mobile Factory, a Dutch project that hopes to give survivors of natural disasters and wars the tools they need to rebuild their homes using rubble and technologi­cal know-how.

“If we reuse rubble, with which we can produce earthquake-resistant houses at low cost, that means that everybody gets the same chance,” explained Gerard Steijn, founder of the Mobile Factory project.

Thirty homes will be built on the outskirts of Port-au-Prince, Haiti, with constructi­on set to begin later this year in a pilot project to test the technology, Steijn said.

The system, which fits into two shipping containers, cuts rubble into small pieces, separates the different elements, and then turns the pieces into liquid concrete. That concrete is then moulded into blocks called “QBrixx.”

With 125 kilograms of rubble, the group says it can build one 25-ki- logram Q-Brixx block and reinforce basic infrastruc­ture, such as earthquake-proofing the home’s foundation. The project’s website states that 750 blocks go into the constructi­on of one home.

The blocks (measuring 20x10x10 centimetre­s) are similar to Lego pieces in that they are stackable and can be used to make different types and sizes of homes, Steijn said.

“If you use (a) bricklayin­g system, you connect blocks to each other in a stiff way that makes it weak in an earthquake situation. If you stack them instead of putting mortar between it, then the blocks are going to tremble instead of breaking when there is an earthquake,” he told the Star.

The group is currently fundraisin­g online and hopes to get $400,000 in donations to get the “Petit Paradis” community off the ground. By midday Monday, they had raised just over $3,000.

Future residents of the community will be trained to build their own homes, explained Joel Dresse, Belgium’s Honorary Consul in Haiti, who owns the 6,000 square metres of land where the houses will be built.

“They are excited because they see the potential, they see the plans,” Dresse said.

A devastatin­g earthquake struck Haiti in 2010, leaving more than 230,000 people dead, displacing 1.5 million others and levelling homes and basic infrastruc­ture.

The quake created about 10 million cubic metres of debris, more than 97 per cent of which has been cleared from the country’s streets, according to the United Nations.

Dresse said he expected the technology to arrive in Haiti in the fall and for constructi­on of the blocks to begin by the end of the year.

If the pilot project is successful, “we could have more and more people wanting to have the same type of house.”

 ?? THE MOBILE FACTORY ?? The Mobile Factory project aims to convert rubble into low-cost housing.
THE MOBILE FACTORY The Mobile Factory project aims to convert rubble into low-cost housing.

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