Project idea
The traditional pottery heritage craft in "Nag al Fathura" village is in severe decline. This crisis is driven by a staggering +284% increase in the cost of gas fuel in Egypt over the last 10 years, which has made conventional production economically unsustainable for local craftsmen. The goal of this project, "Breathing Pottery," is to revitalize this dying heritage by introducing an innovative, closed-loop architectural solution that eliminates reliance on costly fossil fuels.
Project description
To counteract the rapid decrease of active pottery workshops, the project introduces a community-driven facility designed for 25 families of local artisans. The architecture integrates traditional pigeon towers with modern biogas units to convert pigeon guano and nearby agricultural waste into a cheap, completely sustainable source of fuel. By reducing the daily project gas fuel usage from 30m^3 to 0m^3 of external municipal gas, the design drastically minimizes production costs, allowing struggling workshops to reopen and thrive economically.
Technical information
The project includes: Zero-Gas Dependency: The integration of 5 specialized pigeon towers produces enough daily biogas to entirely replace the 30m^3 of costly gas fuel previously required. Spatial Optimization: To help downsized workshops maximize efficiency, the project incorporates vertical "drying walls" (mesh facades) that utilize air pressure differentials to rapidly dry pottery while cutting down the physical space footprint drastically.
Mohamed Zidan
Cairo University, Faculty of Engineering Architecture Department.
Egypt
Arquitetura
Projeto submetido
12. 06. 2026Etiqueta
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