NEEV
It is estimated that more than 1 billion people, almost 25% of all urban population, live in informal settlements. UN Habitat estimates that in the next 15 years, three billion people will live in substandard homes.
Lack of affordable housing, weak governance, displacement caused by rural-urban migration, conflicts, natural disasters and climate change are all factors that are driving these numbers up, making informal settlements one of the dominant characteristics of a large proportion of present and future cities.
Behind the edification of such structures is the process of incremental construction. Implemented also in rural areas, it is identifiable by a lack of access to trained construction professionals, the absence of an approval and monitoring processes. As a result, a common factor across these contexts is the poor safety of the structures and and quality of the houses, especially their thermal performance and resilience to extreme weather.
Housing and the growth of cities are strictly connected to energy consumption because of how we heat and cool them. Housing counts for 30% of the global gas emissions. Professional construction inputs could improve these performances and reduce the impact on the environment.
Incremental housing often oversees this aspect mainly because of a lack of awareness on new and better construction techniques or materials. As a result, not only these units have an extremely poor thermal efficiency but also create living conditions that negatively affect their inhabitants (high and low temperatures, poor ventilation and high levels of humidity and pollution).
(Attempted Solutions, so far) Agencies and governments across the world are working to implement programs to provide construction technical assistance to vulnerable groups. One of the key challenges of these programs is reaching scale in providing door-to-door CTA. All attempts at addressing this point have so far shown big limits as professional architectural and engineering expertise is limited, expensive and resource intensive.
While digital solutions have been critical to solve the challenge of reaching scale in similar social endemic problems in other fields (like healthcare and agriculture), so far the existing digital technologies related to the building sector are expensive and developed to be used only by professionals. As a result, the use of digital technology in the above programs has only been marginal.
What is in place today to solve this issue is based on training program to improve the construction mason's skills and/or printed manuals on how to build better. Both solutions are not really efficient as the training il limited in time and hard copy manuals cant be updated or disseminated as easily.
NEEV is a digital solution that allows people with no technical background to create housing construction cost estimates, bill of quantities and construction manuals with drawings and structural details through a simple interface and a highly customizable process.
Through the mobile interface of NEEV anyone can create and share customized technical inputs within minutes enabling a disruptive process that has the potential to influence the construction of millions of buildings in a way never possible until now.
NEEV automatically gathers local climate and other parameters (based on the geo-localization of the projects) to generate specific inputs related to materials, construction systems and technologies that if implemented can improve the thermal efficiency of the buildings (reducing future energy consumption).
Both a web and mobile app, NEEV is specifically designed to support all the stakeholders working in the incremental housing context with the aim to tackle the missing piece of this sector: construction quality. By providing construction technical assistance to everyone, NEEV can improve building resilience and sustainability at scale.
NEEV is developed to be adopted in different geographies and countries. It is multi-language; it supports different housing typologies, constructive techniques and materials to adapt to local practices; it’s customizable in materials and labor rates.
NEEV is specifically designed to support low-income communities living in informal settlements. As today, the majority of dwellers living in these areas share substandard living standards and get zero expert support in relation to how to build safe and sustainable houses.
If low-income dwellers can access and implement the customized solutions generated by NEEV, they'll have the opportunity to build (or retrofit) houses that are safer, with higher living standards (due to better performance) that will consume less energy.
Based on our years of research and work across countries, we discovered that poor housing quality is not a consequence of poverty but the result of lack of good inputs. Consider for instance the layout of a house. Placing the windows in a particular way, shaping the roof or the orientation of the building in a specific way, are all inexpensive solution that can dramatically improve light and ventilation (reduce or improve the inner temperature during extreme climates)and thus the thermal performance of a house.
Not only NEEV solve the problem of access to construction inputs, but it can also be used to disseminate new and innovative products or construction solutions that can contribute to make hoses more resilient to extreme weather and reduce the carbon footprint impact considering the all construction cycle.
Often specific solutions are successfully applied in certain contexts or geographies but they remain confined there due to various barriers. It is possible that a new type of roof or brick or solar panel that is successfully adopted in India could be a perfect solution for a same climate zone in Africa, however it is also unlikely that the same solution will reach there, especially in the low-income and informal contexts.
NEEV has the ambition to become an international tool able to work as a compendium of technical construction solution and materials giving vulnerable communities the chance to inform and empower themself in relation to housing construction.
To deliver our solution (NEEV) mHS formed a strategic partnership with the GEM Foundation to improve and distribute NEEV. We are now currently working on a partnership with Trellis Housing Finance that will be the key partner to promote the adoption of NEEV in Pakistan.
With this consortium in place we can say to be the right team to design and deliver our solution.
GEM offers one of the world’s most complete sources of risk resources and a globally accepted standard for risk assessment (their digital products are used and adopted by public, private and academic institutions worldwide from over 150 countries). The Trellis' team of experts has a combined 150+ years of industry experience across affordable housing, micro-finance & finance background and has a great presence and outreach across Pakistan.
As per our (mHS) capacity to understand and represent the communities we serve, the Team Lead and his co-founder well understand the importance of being close to the challenges and related communities in order to design solutions (when the decision to start mHS was taken, we immediately move from Cambridge in US to New Delhi).
What the question here descrive as "proximity to communities" can also find a parallel in the first stage of the design thinking process, a first critical step that require patience, empathy, curiosity and a strong connection with the people. At mHS we apply this process on all our projects and, in order to understand the needs of of our target groups, since 2009 we have been spending a great deal of time with our team within the informal settlements of India and other Countries. It is also by engaging and creating partnerships with local CBOs and NGOs that we have always ensured the right approach, respect and access to the communities we worked with.
For this particular solution, we are aware of the challenges that we have to face to introduce this solution. It can be extremely challenging to disrupt a current system (we refer here to the incremental house processes) when the same one has been implemented with decades and become the norm.
After various tests and pilots we realized the importance of having committed strategic partners able to bring to the table the right incentives for the various stakeholders and especially for the endusers.
- Support informal communities in upgrading to more resilient housing, including financing, design, and low-carbon materials or energy sources.
- Netherlands
- Pakistan
- Pilot: An organization testing a product, service, or business model with a small number of users
[in the past-until COVID-19] To deliver our solution NEEV, we have been training over one hundred agents from microfinance institutions, housing finance companies and NGOs as well as low-income masons. Everyone was able to adopt NEEV with minimal onboarding. As of today, between the various user groups of NEEV, thousands of project estimates have been created and hundreds of construction manuals have been generated and shared using NEEV. The NEEV analytics and the response of specific interviews with company’s agents, confirm a clear benefit for their operations and for their customers. A qualitative research with about 50 households and masons over a period of 6 months also indicate a positive interest in NEEV and its impact.
[currently] Currently the people accessing NEEV is extremely limited. During the Covid-19 pandemic our partners in India faced serious problems and our plan to have NEEV adopted stalled. Moreover, based on the experience of the past pilots, the mHS team realized that to maintain and scale NEEV it was necessary to have the right technical capacity and a strong partner already serving the communities we were targeting. As a result in the past year we focused on strategic partnerships. With our partnership with GEM we did achieve to solve the technical part while with the ongoing discussion with Trellis we aim to solve the last critical part related to the dissemination of the solution within the targeted communities.
[from now on] Trellis has a presence and is currently operating in the main three cities of Pakistan, Karachi, Lahore and Islamabad. Around fifty agents are on field and connected with the communities. With the support of the NEEV technology Trellis aims to promote and offer a housing product for incremental housing. The product will be launch in June or July 2023 and the goal is to serve 150 families within the first 12 months. We are looking to impact about 2000 people in the next 3 years.
The main challenge that we need to solve to disseminate our solution is the behavioral aspect related to the decisions taken by low-income dwellers (during incremental housing processes) that can be a barrier for the acceptance and adoption of NEEV.
We strongly believe that to overcome this challenge we need to partner with other organizations that the endusers trust and able to offer them key incentives. As the partnership with Trellis can be key to distribute our solution in Pakistan, we do need more of such partnerships for other countries.
One of our big challenges, being a small and niche organization, is for us to be able to reach out and be connected with potential partners that can help us to achieve our goal to make NEEV becoming a standard solution.
While funding still remain (at least at this stage) a critical need and despite the fact that we have a decent network, it is critical that more people will know bout our solution. The Solve call is a great opportunity for us to connect with other solvers and to be part of the MIT network of leaders and experts. If selected, the exposure that we could get will be fantastic for our project.
Given the stage of the project and the potentials to scale up NEEV globally, having access to mentoring and coaching can also be as well critical for our success.
- Business Model (e.g. product-market fit, strategy & development)
- Legal or Regulatory Matters
- Product / Service Distribution (e.g. delivery, logistics, expanding client base)
- Public Relations (e.g. branding/marketing strategy, social and global media)

Project Manager