KALASAG: A Proposed Economic and Socialized Housing Community
Submitted by:
MORESCA, LIANNE FRANCINE A.
ARC- 4101
BACKGROUND OF THE STUDY
The KALASAG proposal seeks to address the livability issue with housing in the
Philippines, recognizing that it involves more than just giving a place to live and stressing the
significance of building homes that are cozy and appropriate for the Filipino people. The
establishment of adequate housing remains a challenge, especially in developing countries
like the Philippines, where national and local government lack the resources to sufficiently
address it.
Typhoons usually travel east to west throughout the nation, using the Coriolis effect to
move either north or west. Typhoons rarely hit Mindanao; instead, they mostly affect the
parts of the country that face the Pacific Ocean, such as the Eastern Visayas, the Bicol
Region, and northern Luzon.
This initiative aims to break the cycle of poverty and contribute to a more equitable
and sustainable growth for the Philippines by addressing the cultural and community
components and emphasizing the habitability of dwellings.
HOUSING NEEDS IN THE PHILIPPINES
One prominent aspect of inequality in the Philippines is the absence of suitable
housing. The Department of Human Settlements and Urban Development projects that the
enormous housing backlog will amount to 6.57 million units by 2022; if nothing is done, the
shortfall could rise to 22 million units by 2040. Over 4 million Filipinos reside in substandard
housing in the Metro Manila area, a situation exacerbated by natural catastrophes and the
COVID-19 pandemic. There are roughly 20 tropical cyclones and regular earthquake activity
in the Philippines each year. Over 150,000 families have benefited from Habitat Philippines'
and its multisectoral partners' efforts since 1988 as they construct houses, increase
community empowerment, and enhance access to essential social services and disaster
resilience.
BOOSTING DISASTER PREPAREDNESS, RESILIENCE, AND RECOVERY
Habitat, whose primary focus is shelter, assists families impacted by disasters in the
most severely damaged areas in reconstructing their houses and livelihoods. Our projects
include building and maintaining community infrastructure, finding long-term housing
alternatives, and providing hygiene and sanitation kits and kits for repairing shelters. Through
the provision of community-based disaster risk reduction management training, Habitat
further enhances the preparedness of the communities for disasters.
BUILDING A RESILIENT ARCHITECTURE
Nothing will fail if it is designed to fail. Your application should be able to recover
from failure and remain accessible to clients if it has a resilient architecture. Using best
practices to recover your application from increasing loads brought on by a spike in user
requests, malicious assaults, and architectural component failures is part of making your
architecture robust. All architectural levels, including networking, security, applications,
databases, and infrastructure, must leverage resilience. A robust architecture ought to bounce
back in the anticipated time frame.
HOUSING THE POOR IN NEGROS OCCIDENTAL
10,000 housing units for urban poor families are being built in Negros Occidental
province by Habitat for Humanity and its partner, the Hilti Foundation. The homes in a
neighborhood in Barangay E. Lopez, Silay City, have already been completed, and those in
San Carlos City are currently under construction. The project aims to help beneficiaries
restart their lives by providing them with disaster-resilient shelters in a safe and peaceful
environment.
The resettlement has expanded into a community currently known as "Katuwang,"
which translates to "partners" in the local tongue, and is more than just a housing project.
Beneficiaries now feel safer and more at ease since not only can the houses weather
storms, but the neighborhood is also more orderly and calm. They are now proud owners of a
house and the lot it sits on, so there is no need to worry about being evicted.
A BAMBOO CONSTRUCTION ECO-SYSTEM FOR SOCIAL HOUSING IN
NEGROS OCCIDENTAL, PHILIPPINES
There is an acute housing scarcity in the Philippines as a result of two million more
people moving there each year and frequent natural catastrophes. The backlog is predicted to
grow to 6.5 million dwellings by 2030.
The ¨Build, Build, Build´ effort by the government has led to a sharp increase in the
building industry. Nevertheless, the nation still depends heavily on imported goods: massive
amounts of lumber, cement, aggregates, galvanized iron sheeting, reinforced steel bars, and
other commodities are imported from mainland Asia.
PROJECT BACKGROUND
A Hilti engineer began testing a housing technology in 2012 because bamboo is a
more affordable and durable material than the typical materials used for social housing in the
Philippines and can endure natural calamities. The Base Bahay Foundation was put in place
in 2014 in order to implement "Cement Bamboo Frame Technology" (CBFT). By 2018, the
CBFT method had been used to build over 750 homes, and local engineered bamboo
suppliers had been established, resulting in the creation of respectable jobs in the nation's
rural areas. In order to instruct developers and builders in the use of bamboo construction
technology and to continuously enhance it, BASE was converted into a research center for
the material in 2019.
PROJECT OBJECTIVES
In the Philippines' Negros Occidental province, 10,000 cheap, disaster-resistant
bamboo homes will be constructed as part of a project that aspires to become a model for
creative, inclusive, and environmentally friendly social housing. At the heart of the conflict
are three targets:
Creating a local environment for sustainable and disaster-resistant building of
inexpensive dwellings constructed from bamboo, incl. favorable conditions [financial
controls, land use, supplier sector.
Create prosperous communities in Negros Occidental that will enable 10,000
households to actively direct their own destiny.
Demonstrate the applicability of the Cement Bamboo Frame Technology for large-
scale applications.
PROJECT DESCRIPTION
Habitat for Humanity forms a coalition of partners from public, private and third
sector, and from international to local levels, that join forces to achieve the project objective,
each adding their specific expertise and knowledge. The coalition is clustered in four
components:
Construction and technology
Prepare CBFT for industrial use and the long-term benefit of families (e.g. house
extensions)
Enable local builders in accredited programs to build safe and affordable bamboo
homes
Integrate technical innovation in the construction process (solar, waste management,
etc.)
Site planning and development
Procure suitable plots of land for the construction of 10,000 homes, setting an
example for an integrated approach to social housing
Innovate the design of low-income communities (public spaces, urban gardening, etc.)
Enable local government units to manage inclusive urban development
Housing finance
Discover and make available public funds for housing (subsidies, tax breaks, etc.)
Make available microfinance schemes to enable low-income families to invest in a
house
Enable local governments to use these mechanisms long-term
Community building
Generate community governance models and empower the individual and the
community to raise their voices.
Develop lighthouse projects creating opportunities for social and economic
development
Help local governments create fair and effective social welfare schemes
LOCAL LITERATURE
DECA HOMES, DAVAO
Source: https://apolonioandgeonzonrealty.com/deca-homes-talomo/
In the Philippines, DECA Homes is a real estate developer that prioritizes offering
cheap home options for families in the Philippines. renowned for its dedication to dealing
with the housing requirements of middle-class to low-income families, DECA Homes has
created a number of cheap home developments across the nation's suburban and metropolitan
areas. Usually, these developments provide a variety of housing options, such as townhomes
and single-detached homes, and are intended to build thriving neighborhoods with basic
services like playgrounds and parks. DECA Homes prioritizes neighborhood development
and seeks to improve the inhabitants' standard of living. The business provides adjustable
terms for payments. Including choices for internal funding, bank financing, and Pag-IBIG
housing loans, creating more people can become homeowners.
LUMINA HOMES
Source: www.lumina.com.ph
In the Philippines, Lumina Homes is a well-known real estate company that
specializes in offering high-quality, reasonably priced homes that are tailored to the needs of
typical Filipino families. Townhouses and single firewall apartments are among the housing
options that Lumina Homes provides in a number of areas across the country as part of its
commitment to make homeownership affordable. The developments are positioned to give
people easy access to and convenience from important businesses. By include features like
multipurpose halls, playgrounds, and basketball courts, Lumina Homes places a strong
emphasis on community development and encourages members to feel a sense of
camaraderie and belonging.