Categories: Culture

Pune couple builds a weather-proof and sustainable farmhouse for just Rs.4 lakhs!

<p>
<strong>As architects they have designed several buildings but the closet to their hearts is the one, they built with their hands. Meet Yuga Akhare and Sagar Shirude, a couple from Pune, Maharashtra who gave creativity a new dimension by constructing a two-floor house made of mud, all by themselves.</strong></p>
<p>
Planning to make a farmhouse for themselves in Wagheshwar village, the couple thought of using bamboo and clay for construction. The locals informed that the structure would not be able to withstand the region’s heavy rains.</p>
<p>
Not willing to give up, the two looked at houses and forts that had been constructed in the past with mud and many of them were still intact. It is then decided to use old construction methods to come with a design and materials for a sustainable structure. For this they used material which was available locally and also recycled many things.</p>
<p>
Talking to thebetterindia.com Shirude disclosed: <a href="https://www.thebetterindia.com/266256/low-cost-sustainable-bamboo-mud-house-upcycling-pune-couple-cyclone/">“We have used locally available bamboo,</a> red soil and grass for this house. We sourced stems of Karvy plants and bamboo mats from a nearby forest for the walls. For clay, we took an indigenous concoction of red soil, husk, jaggery and juice from the myrobalan plant. This was further mixed with neem, cow urine and cow dung. The land preparation and coating for walls were done with cow urine and cow dung.”</p>
<p>
<img alt="" src="https://www.indianarrative.com/upload/news/Matti_Mahal2.jpg" style="width: 720px; height: 480px;" /></p>
<p>
Further for the roof, the bamboo frames were covered with two layers – one of plastic sheets and the other was of grass. The binding layer did not allow water during monsoon inside the house.</p>
<p>
Using a 700 years old “wattle and daub” technique in which woven lattice of wooden or bamboo strips are plastered with filler material that is sticky like mud plaster, to make the structure weatherproof. It also provided sound and high thermal insulation.</p>
<p>
For walls Cob system in which a mixture of soil, cow dung and urine, hay and lime was used to make the place absorb heat during cold season and cool during the hot ones thereby eliminating use of air-conditioners and fans.</p>
<p>
Recycled wood was utilised for windows and doors while upcycled tiles were used to make bathroom floors.</p>
<p>
Named “Mitti Mahal”, the farmhouse was built with the help of local masons in a period of four months, and has a verandah, kitchen, living room, bathroom, bedroom and terrace. And all it cost was just Rs. Four lakhs only.</p>
<p>
Akhare and Shirude graduated from Pune in 2014 and started Saagaa Associates.</p>

IN Bureau

Recent Posts

“Whatever the verdict, our relationship with US will only grow”: EAM Jaishankr on US Presidential Elections

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar held a joint presser with his Australian Counterpart Penny Wong,…

2 hours ago

‘Political space given to extremist forces’: EAM Jaishankar on attacks on Hindu temples in Canada

External Affairs Minister, S Jaishankar expressed concerns about the recent attacks on the Hindu temples…

3 hours ago

Coast Guard Chief S Paramesh calls on Navy Chief Admiral, deliberates on ICG’s operational readiness

Indian Coast Guard Chief Director General S Paramesh has called on Indian Navy Chief Admiral…

4 hours ago

North Korea launches short-range ballistic missiles ahead of US elections

Just a few hours ahead of the presidential polls in the United States, North Korea…

4 hours ago

Brampton: Thousands take out solidarity rally against attacks on Hindu temples in Canada

Over a thousand Canadian Hindus gathered outside the Hindu Sabha Mandir in Brampton, Canada on…

5 hours ago

Jaishankar meets Australian counterpart Penny Wong for Foreign Ministers’ Framework Dialogue in Canberra

External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar was welcomed by Australian Foreign Minister, Penny Wong, at the…

5 hours ago