In region Global and in group Global Shelter Cluster

Promoting Safer Building Working Group

Pages

Detailed shelter response profile Northeast Nigeria

Title
Detailed shelter response profile Northeast Nigeria
Publisher
psbwg
Date
Type
Case study
Technical Support and Design
Cross-Cutting Issues
Source
CRAterre, IOM and UMIMAID with support from Nigeria Humanitarian Fund (NHF), USAID Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance, and the French National Research Agency (ANR)
Language
English
Tags
Terms of Reference Resource Mobilization Assessment, Monitoring, and Evaluation Reporting Tools and Guidance Technical Guidance Design Specifications Shelter Programming Early Recovery Protection Environment Gender Housing, Land, and Property Rights Recovery Reconstruction Development Aggregates Concrete Masonry Metal Sheeting Timber Built Environment Professionals Community Participation Construction Methods Owner Driven Permanent Housing Repairs and Retrofitting Risk Reduction Example Guidance
Description

GLOBAL SHELTER CLUSTER, SHELTER CLUSTER NIGERIA, IOM, CRATERRE, UNIMAID, LABEX AE&CC-ENSAG-UGA, SANCHEZ MUÑOZ, Nuria, SEVILLANO GUTIERREZ, Enrique, PACE, Paola, HAMIDINE, Maliki, ALI, Abdi, OKOKO, Davies, HAMID, Faiza, PICCIOLI, Alberto, JIDDA, Umar, MUGAMBWA, Irene, ONDIEKI MESA, Felix, OKANDE, Austine, GARBA, Hyeladzira, SALEH, Peter, GARBA, Samuel, PHANUEL BIRMA, Joshua, AMINU KANI, Fatima, 2024. Detailed shelter response profile Northeast Nigeria: local building cultures for sustainable and resilient habitats. Villefontaine : CRAterre. 91 p.

 

Abstract

This Profile was produced from May 2023 to November 2024. The process was codirected by IOM Nigeria, UNIMAID (University of Maiduguri), and CRAterre, with the tight collaboration of the Shelter – DMS/CCCM Cluster in Nigeria. 

IOM and other partners have identified several challenges in providing durable shelter solutions, including concerns about the durability of local materials, limited focus on long-term solutions, or the adaptability of basic housing to seasonal changes and weather conditions.

While challenges exist, this Shelter Response Profile aims to provide a basic understanding of the context and key issues related to shelter sector operations, and in particular to support housing projects that make best use of and evolve existing good practices in Local Building Cultures. 

Emphasis is placed on local building practices and materials that enable better building, rebuilding rebuild or rehabilitate, and which lend themselves to the possibility of the ability of those affected to better shelter themselves. To this end, the strengths of local construction and practices, knowledge and experience developed by local communities were identified, analyzed and, in many cases, validated over the years. 

The core of data collection has been achieved thanks to Participatory assessments of local habitat conducted by UNIMAID and IOM in 23 locations in the three BAY States, thanks to the active participation of communities, students and professors at UNIMAID, and shelter practitioners, with remote support of CRAterre. 

The profile was revised by academics and shelter and housing actors in Nigeria, and by several Nigerian and international experts. This document summarizes and disseminates strengths of local building cultures.