Traditional/Vernacular Architecture tour for a school assignment was an interesting time.

In my group, we went to this village in Imo state.
Peaceful and quiet and we saw this building.
My first encounter with a real-life, one-storey, mud house.
Mud architecture 1
I was too scared to go in.
It had not been in use for a while.
What if it caves in under our weight?
Mud architecture 2
I peacefully took the building pictures without the need to tempt the gods.
In helping with building sustainability and minimizing climate crisis, we need to go back to using our local building materials.
Mud architecture 3
Clay is accessible and creates a better indoor climate for our interiors.
A research institute was conducting tests on clay bricks somewhere in Awka and it was abandoned. It’s probably due to funds but I can as well assume that other reasons would hover around disinterest in using local materials.
Mud architecture 4
Timber is within reach. I saw the neatly made raffia bed floor.
We don’t expect a complete overhaul back to local materials but start with the walls. Instead of floor tiles for finishes, use timber or raffia mats.
You’re probably thinking that this girl is going nuts, talking about us going back to what our fathers abandoned to embrace the kerosene lantern, but have you seen what the modern whites are doing with our local products in their homes?
Mud architecture 5
They use the raffia mat as a rug and they celebrate it like it’s gold. The way they write about it on CNN, if I wasn’t in Africa, I would be more than thrilled.
Their terrace swing chairs are made of raffia materials imported from where?
You tell me.
The challenge is will you be open to me designing such for you?