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Can our Kenyan fundis build something like this?
tycho
#21 Posted : Friday, August 17, 2018 2:09:52 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 7/1/2011
Posts: 8,804
Location: Nairobi
Iganamagana
#22 Posted : Saturday, August 18, 2018 7:53:38 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 3/27/2009
Posts: 1,437
MugundaMan wrote:
Swenani wrote:
MugundaMan wrote:
chiaroscuro wrote:



You are comparing a completed house to one that is still under construction

Now fair.



I think I know your style (below) kindogo kindogo kiasi kiasi. Sindio?





Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly

Is that a storey toilet?


Nope. Cutting edge architecture that someone probably paid 10 metre+ for smile



This might be an office block for an open air yard. Think logistics firm or a distribution centre. No sign of life though if we were to go by the driveway.
hardwood
#23 Posted : Saturday, August 18, 2018 8:39:03 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 7/28/2015
Posts: 9,562
Location: Rodi Kopany, Homa Bay
Iganamagana wrote:
MugundaMan wrote:
Swenani wrote:
MugundaMan wrote:
chiaroscuro wrote:



You are comparing a completed house to one that is still under construction

Now fair.



I think I know your style (below) kindogo kindogo kiasi kiasi. Sindio?





Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly

Is that a storey toilet?


Nope. Cutting edge architecture that someone probably paid 10 metre+ for smile



This might be an office block for an open air yard. Think logistics firm or a distribution centre. No sign of life though if we were to go by the driveway.


Could be the left wing block of apartments he's putting up pole pole.
MugundaMan
#24 Posted : Saturday, August 18, 2018 9:17:13 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 1/8/2018
Posts: 2,212
Location: DC (Dustbowl County)
Iganamagana wrote:
MugundaMan wrote:
Swenani wrote:
MugundaMan wrote:
chiaroscuro wrote:



You are comparing a completed house to one that is still under construction

Now fair.



I think I know your style (below) kindogo kindogo kiasi kiasi. Sindio?





Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly Laughing out loudly

Is that a storey toilet?


Nope. Cutting edge architecture that someone probably paid 10 metre+ for smile



This might be an office block for an open air yard. Think logistics firm or a distribution centre. No sign of life though if we were to go by the driveway.



Nope, tis a completed and occupied maisonette. Mr Dickson paid 5 metre to build it. 4br/2 ensuite. Evidence hapa
MugundaMan
#25 Posted : Monday, August 20, 2018 5:11:50 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 1/8/2018
Posts: 2,212
Location: DC (Dustbowl County)
Obiero and chiaroscuro, what do you guys think about this one? Drool

hardwood
#26 Posted : Monday, August 20, 2018 9:31:47 AM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 7/28/2015
Posts: 9,562
Location: Rodi Kopany, Homa Bay
MugundaMan wrote:
Obiero and chiaroscuro, what do you guys think about this one? Drool



Our architects must be very "creative". Whatever they are smoking....smile .
wukan
#27 Posted : Monday, August 20, 2018 10:46:20 AM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 11/13/2015
Posts: 1,658
The environment we create is a reflection of our state of mind. Our architecture reveals our society's love for clutter. We clutter homes, roads, markets. We have a problem with free-flowing space sijui ni kwa nini. I passed by Holy Family Basilica in CBD and the space is now cluttered with funny buildings, car-parks-the holiness is just gone.
hardwood
#28 Posted : Monday, August 20, 2018 1:16:57 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 7/28/2015
Posts: 9,562
Location: Rodi Kopany, Homa Bay
wukan wrote:
The environment we create is a reflection of our state of mind. Our architecture reveals our society's love for clutter. We clutter homes, roads, markets. We have a problem with free-flowing space sijui ni kwa nini. I passed by Holy Family Basilica in CBD and the space is now cluttered with funny buildings, car-parks-the holiness is just gone.



It's more of love for chaos. I don't know what happened coz when the white man arrived in kenya in the late 1800s he found very well planned homesteads and villages. The architecture was also excellent, functional and uniform. Like this kikuyu village. And the good thing is that a house was built in one day and people moved on to other things unlike now when one has to be tied to a 20yr killer mortgage. Housing used to be a simple straight forward affair and no one lacked housing (or food) but mzungu complicated it so as to make money by supplying building materials and mortgage funds, until now many cannot afford homes because they were brainwashed and told their architecture is ushenzi.









hardwood
#29 Posted : Monday, August 20, 2018 1:42:24 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 7/28/2015
Posts: 9,562
Location: Rodi Kopany, Homa Bay
At least the South Africans werent as brainwashed as we were and they maintained their architecture but modernized their huts (brick walls, electricity, water etc). Like this President Zuma homestead (with his wives) in the village. He even has a cattle pen in the centre of the homestead, like his forefathers.

https://www.thesouthafri...-of-corruption-nkandla/







Inside some of the huts....

wukan
#30 Posted : Monday, August 20, 2018 2:03:22 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 11/13/2015
Posts: 1,658
Lovely the way those huts blend into the landscape-there is a sense of harmony. The mzungu killed those huts with the hut tax-they calculated taxes based on the number of huts in the compound.
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