Situation:
In 1999 the world population reached 6 billion people. Projections indicate
that the world will have 7 billion people by 2010 with 97.6% of the population
growth taking place in developing countries. The population of developing countries
has more than doubled in the 35 years from 1955 to 1990, growing from 1.89 billion
to 4.13 billion. Urban settlements in the developing countries are, at present,
growing five times as fast as those in the developed countries. Cities in these
countries are already faced by enormous backlogs in shelter, infrastructure
and services.
The United Nations Habitat
Agenda states, "During the course of history, urbanization has been associated
with economic and social progress, the promotion of literacy and education,
the improvement of the general state of health, greater access to social services,
and cultural, political and religious participation. Urban settlements, properly
managed, hold the promise for human development and the protection of the world’s
natural resources through their ability to support large numbers of people while
limiting their impact on the natural environment".
Every day the developing
countries have to accommodate 150,000 additional urban dwellers. While large
cities in developing countries have been growing at rates nearing 5% per year,
slums and squatter settlements have been growing nearly twice as fast. It has
been estimated that 17% of the world's housing consists of one-room shelter,
of which some three quarters are to be found in the developing countries. Some
42% of rural and 35% of urban dwellings in Africa are single-roomed. The overwhelming
shelter problem in the developing countries is the shortage of affordable housing
for low-income households in urban areas. This has resulted in the proliferation
of slums and squatter settlements. At least 600 million urban dwellers in Africa,
Asia and Latin America live in life-and-health threatening homes and neighborhoods
because of the poor housing and living conditions and the lack of adequate provision
for sanitation, drainage, removal of garbage and health care. An increasing
number of the urban poor are also homeless in both developed and developing
countries, with current estimates of the homeless population being over 100
million.
Target:
The world can not turn its back on the more than 1 billion people world wide
that live in sub-standard living conditions. The goal of the global community
should be no less than providing people in all countries and all societies with
affordable and dignified housing.
Proposal:
Considering the alarming nature of the shelter problem facing the world at the
onset of the 21st century, traditional methods of meeting the worlds housing
demands will not be sufficient. New and innovative means of constructing shelter
must be considered. Contour Crafting technology is the best way to address the
housing problem of the 21st century. Using materials readily available at the
build site, construction by Contour Crafting can build dignified houses or colony
of houses with all the utilities for electrical and plumbing in less than 24
hours (per house). Due to the nature of this Solid Free-From fabrication technology,
there will be minimal waste of construction material and almost non-existent
labor costs and labor injuries and fatalities which happen frequently at construction
sites (500,000 people get seriously injured or killed in construction annually
in the US alone, a country in which stringent safety codes are regulated). The
potential of Contour Crafting to quickly and efficiently alleviate housing concerns
cannot be overlooked. Contour Crafting is the construction method of the future.