Incremental Housing and the Material Blind Spot in Sub-Saharan Africa

dc.contributor.authorNikol Hoiderková
dc.contributor.authorSikama Moses Sekenwa
dc.date.accessioned2026-01-12T18:49:12Z
dc.date.issued2026
dc.descriptionSubmitted for consideration to the SGAS/SSEA & VAD Conference (Basel, 2026), to the Planetary Health, Urbanization, and Natural Resources Panel. This version has not yet been peer-reviewed.
dc.description.abstractUrbanization in sub-Saharan Africa is largely through auto-construction, and incremental housing serves as the de facto city-making scheme. Urban resilience discourse leans heavily on the location and legality of incremental housing settlements, therefore missing a critical blind spot in materiality (the physical substance of the houses). This paper addresses this blind spot by arguing that the “Standard Trajectory” that favors industrial materials such as concrete is more than just a financial and technical decision. It is a profound bid to be a legitimate urbanite through material citizenship. Through the analysis of Environmental Imaginary (the social prestige of durability) and Structural Market Constraints (the "Cement-Concrete Complex"), we identify a dominant Maladaptation Trap. This trap explains why, in attaining social legibility, homeowners are often exposed to thermally hostile and financially rigid structures. We also demonstrate a dependency created by the cement industry, which marginalizes sustainable alternatives. The paper concludes that genuine urban resilience needs to dismantle this trap by giving sustainable materials more visibility, accessibility, and aspirational desirability, similar to concrete.
dc.description.provenanceSubmitted by Sikama Sekenwa (sikama.sekenwa@cvut.cz) on 2026-01-12T18:49:12Z No. of bitstreams: 2 license_rdf: 776 bytes, checksum: 95eb36909322d2093019720e2737682f (MD5) Incremental Housing and the Material Blind Spot in Sub-Saharan Africa.pdf: 367257 bytes, checksum: 120ab3a66886df260939585df4f669db (MD5)en
dc.description.provenanceMade available in DSpace on 2026-01-12T18:49:12Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 license_rdf: 776 bytes, checksum: 95eb36909322d2093019720e2737682f (MD5) Incremental Housing and the Material Blind Spot in Sub-Saharan Africa.pdf: 367257 bytes, checksum: 120ab3a66886df260939585df4f669db (MD5) Previous issue date: 2026en
dc.identifier.urihttps://africarxiv.ubuntunet.net/handle/1/10719
dc.language.isoen
dc.rightsCC0 1.0 Universalen
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
dc.subjectIncremental Housing
dc.subjectUrban Resilience
dc.subjectSub-Saharan Africa
dc.subjectMateriality
dc.subjectMaladaptation
dc.subjectConcrete
dc.subjectVernacular Architecture
dc.subjectClimate Change
dc.titleIncremental Housing and the Material Blind Spot in Sub-Saharan Africa
dc.typeWorking Paper

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