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Built Environment: West African Architectu Mande, Nabdam, Ganvie, Bamileke; Igbo; and Afro-Brazilian To explore how the built environment shapes, expresses or reflects he ecology, culture, and history of the various West African peoples nstrate the variety and types of architecture that exists in the sub -To identify the diversity of materials used in the creation of African architecture in general

The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

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The Built Environment: West African Architecture : Mande, Nabdam, Ganvie, Bamileke; Igbo; and Afro-Brazilian To explore how the built environment shapes, expresses or reflects the ecology, culture, and history of the various West African peoples - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

The Built Environment: West African Architecture:Mande, Nabdam, Ganvie, Bamileke; Igbo; and Afro-Brazilian

To explore how the built environment shapes, expresses or reflectsthe ecology, culture, and history of the various West African peoples

-To demonstrate the variety and types of architecture that exists in the sub-region-To identify the diversity of materials used in the creation of

African architecture in general

Page 2: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Mande Architecture

Characteristics:

Mud architecture with buttresses and parapets called toronFound throughout the Mande world—Mali, Ivory coast and Burkina Faso

Structures include tombs of religious leaders, and Mosques Structures have minarets that towers above their roofs

Page 3: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Djenne Mosque, Djenne, Mali, adobe bricks, Completed in 1907 after the original 14th century model

Page 4: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Village Mosque at Kawara, Ivory Coast, Mande Architecture

Page 5: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Tomb of Askia Mohammed, (1493-1529) Mali

Page 6: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Sankore Mosque at Timbuktu,Mali, Originally built in 1300 ADPeriodically revampedSince the 14th century

Page 7: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Mosque at Dougouba, Mali

Page 8: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Walata, Nabdam and Hausa

Found in Mauritania; Ghana and Northern Nigeria

Architecture made from stone and covered with mudHouses have two stories, flat roofs and interior courtyards

Exterior walls painted with red ocher, doors and windows decorated with curvilinear patterns

Interior of rooms painted with white and red motifsMotifs inspired by Arabic scripts and referred to as Arabesque

Mostly painted by Women

Page 9: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Courtyard, Mauritania

Page 10: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Interior of the home of the Mayor of Walata with Arabesque decorations, Mauritania

Page 11: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Arabesque decorations, Mauritania

Page 12: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Façade of a Hausa compound decorated in low relief and paints,Zaria, Nigeria

Page 13: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Relief decorations on mud walls,Hausa Architecture,Zaria, Nigeria

Page 14: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Frafra Compound, Painted Mud walls, Northern Ghana

Page 15: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Frafra painted house, pigments on mud walls, Ghana

Page 16: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Granary with prefabricated roofBeing raised into position

Page 17: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Ground plan of Frafra compound

Page 18: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Toguna—Men’s Meeting House--Mali

Page 19: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Dogon Toguna with carved pillars, Mali

Page 20: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Dogon Toguna, Carved wood, millet, stone and mud, Mali

Page 21: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Bamileke—Cameroon

Made by the Bamileke peoples in the Cameroon GrasslandHouses are constructed from palm reeds, bamboo, leaves and wood

Wood used in creating wooden structures that adorn the exterior of the buildingMat woven from vegetable fibers used to create movable partitions inside the house

Thatched roofs, no windows, low doors and raised thresholds

Page 22: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Interior courtyard of the palace showing carved pillars Foumba, Bamum, Cameroon

Page 23: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Framework of a square house ready for thatching, Cameroon

Page 24: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Ganvie, Republic of Benin

“The African Venice”

Page 25: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Ganvie Village, D.R. Benin

Page 26: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Stilt House, Ganvie Village, D.R. Benin

Page 27: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Ganvie Villiage, D.R. Benin

Page 28: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Afro-Portuguese Impulses:

Baroque inspired architecture created by returneesWho settled in Lagos Nigeria, Freetown, Sierra Leone

Characterized by elaborate façade with intricate decorative patternsLater evolved into animated/figurative images

To communicate status

Page 29: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Central Mosque, Afro-Portuguese Baroque Architecture, Joao Baptist Da Costa, 1908-1913, Lagos, Nigeria

Page 30: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Adjavon House, Afro-Portuguese Baroque Architecture, Wydah, D.R. Benin

Page 31: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Americo-Liberian Architecture

Created by returnees; missionaries and administratorsCharacteristics:

Two-story structuresConstructed of wood, tin/zinc

Mostly on stilts with veranda surrounding the first two floors

Page 32: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Macon Hall House, Fortsville, Liberia, Late 19th century. Wood and Tin

Page 33: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Igbo Mbari Houses

Architecture created in response to urgent environmental and social issues/concerns

A communal endeavor erected as shrines in veneration of Ala, the Earth Goddess

Created with mud with representational images to depict scenes of everyday lives

that might parody, critique, mirror, and or chronicle social eventsSculptures are panted with uli decorative patterns

Page 34: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Igbo Mbari House,Ala flanked by her children, Igboland, NigeriaPainted mud, 20th century

Page 35: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Igbo Mbari House to Ala, the Earth Goddess, Adobe and wood, 20th century

Page 36: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Doors, Windows and House Posts

Page 37: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Door,Igbo,Wood,Early 20th century

Page 38: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Door,Olowe,Wood,Yoruba1910-1914

Page 39: The Built Environment: West African Architecture :

Verandah Posts,Olowe,Wood,Yoruba,1910-1914