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In Thailand, finding refuge in concrete viaduct

By | November 13, 2011, 7:02 PM PST

Prefabricated, concrete shells meant to form part of Bangkok’s elevated skyway now serve as refuge for dozens of Thai residents, displaced by floods that have affected about a third of the country’s population. Liz Neisloss spotlights the makeshift community in a video report for CNN.

The company that owns the concrete structures is allowing the residents to use them for homes and also tap into electricity. So the residents have access to power for lights, refrigerators, and televisions.

After first fleeing their houses and then flooded government shelters, the residents are content with the safe, dry spaces (about 85 square feet in the voids of the shells) that allow them to be with their families, their most prized possessions, and their pets.

Residents said they have chosen to stay in the cement confines rather than move into government shelters because they have more space and can keep an eye on their valuables. And, more importantly, because they are with their community. And so, in the chaos that has accompanied the floods, there is the comfort of familiar faces.

The ad hoc neighborhood is an unconventional but effective solution to the parallel problems of empty construction projects and the dire need for shelter after a natural disaster.

Prefab shells offer makeshift shelter for flooded Thais [CNN]
Related in SmartPlanet:
In Bangkok, floods expose lacking urban resilience
Solving sanitation with simple architectural design
Shipping container architecture delivers relief in Japan

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Sun Joo Kim

About Sun Joo Kim

Sun Joo Kim was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2011 to 2012.

Sun Joo Kim

Sun Joo Kim

Contributing Editor

Sun Joo Kim is an architect and creative consultant based in Boston. Her projects include design and master planning of museums, public institutions, hospitals, and university buildings across the U.S. She holds a degree from Carnegie Mellon University and is a member of the U.S. Green Building Council.

Follow her on Twitter.

Sun Joo Kim

Sun Joo Kim

Sun Joo is an independent architectural designer who contracts with design firms. She does not hold any investments in the companies she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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Thank you.
For not blaming the flooding on global warming.

The very highway project that is providing these shelters is evidence of what happens when coastal development gets out of control.

Mother Nature wins when people populate places they should not.
Posted by Hates Idiots
14th Nov 2011
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