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HomeSams VillageBuilding programme

Building programme

The building programme at Sam’s Village is now almost finished.

The Library, Kitchen/Restaurant, Guardhouse, Site Manager’s house, Roundhouse, Community Based Childcare Centre and compost toilets have all been completed.

We have completed 3 Adobe-built accommodation blocks and since 2018 we have been able to accommodate 60 trainees at a time while they have been completing their 4-month residential courses on various topics including Tailoring, Basic Electronics, Tinsmithing, Solar installation and Earth Building (Rammed Earth and Adobe building). For the Earth building training, we have built 2 additional ablution blocks near the accommodation blocks which will include compost toilets, urinal, washroom and water harvester. We have also built 2 rammed earth water harvesters, one by the kitchen and another by the restaurant.

Sam's Village Workshop
Sam's Village Workshop
The Roundhouse (volunteer accommodation)
The Roundhouse (volunteer accommodation)
Guardshouse – covered in Morning Glory!
Guardshouse – covered in Morning Glory!
Compost toilets
Compost toilets
Reception at Sam’s Village
Reception at Sam’s Village
Workshop
Workshop
Photo
Photo
Photo
Photo
Photo
Photo
Photo

All the buildings are built using rammed earth techniques. This is a traditional – and sustainable – method of building in Malawi and across the world. Formwork is made from timber and then an earth and lime mixed is rammed between the formwork to create the walls. The walls are plastered and the buildings can either be thatched or tiled. The formwork can be reused. (You can read more about the details of building in rammed earth here.

Another technique we sometimes use is superadobe, where you fill maize bags with earth and lime, ram the earth mix solid and use the filled maize bags as bricks. The walls are then plastered and can be painted.

These sustainable techniques are in contrast to brick buildings which are popular across Malawi. The main problem is that baking bricks uses up precious firewood resources and contributes to deforestation.

We employ local men and women as labourers and craftspeople, thereby transferring knowledge and practical skills.

Solar panels provide electricity at the Village. They provide enough power for electric light and to charge computers and mobile phones.

Solar panel
Solar panel

We are also building some rammed earth buildings at Njewa (a suburb of Lilongwe) as a demonstration site that is more accessible for interested parties who live in and visit Lilongwe.

Our work