Finalist
Climate Adaptation & Low-Carbon Housing Challenge

Low-carbon climate-adapted housing large-scale dissemination

Team Leader
Anne-Cécile Ragot
Solution Overview & Team Lead Details
Our Organization
Association la Voûte Nubienne (AVN) - The Nubian Vault Association
What is the name of your solution?
Low-carbon climate-adapted housing large-scale dissemination
Provide a one-line summary of your solution.
Market-based large-scale dissemination of an ancestral earth eco-construction technique (replacing tin-roofing with a vaulted earth roof) adapted to extreme temperatures, resistant to violent winds and rains, simple, frugal, and easy to replicate.
Film your elevator pitch.
What specific problem are you solving?

Millions of Sahelian families lack access to decent housing.

Most of them live in precarious unhealthy tin-roof shacks while living under the hottest temperatures in the world, being at the forefront of climate change.

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Inappropriate expensive construction materials and techniques

Deforestation and desertification in the Sahel have led to the disappearance of bush timber and straw used in traditional architecture. ‘Modern’ technical alternatives and the materials they require (cement, steel, corrugated iron roofing, girders, etc.) as well as the monetary systems which their use entails (imports, use of cash) are not adapted to climate nor economic realities. The extreme discomfort imposed by sheet metal roofing (but also by cement brick walls) weighs heavily on sanitary conditions and school results (extreme heat, cold, and noise discomfort during the rains). Sheet metal roofing are more and more often blown off by strong winds, a phenomenon aggravated by climate change, involving heavy repair costs straining fragile families’ savings.

Even the environmentally friendly compressed earth blocks (CEB) are not really adapted to mass local adoption in the Sahel. Indeed, their production requires some cement (with the recent inflation, its cost has significantly increased; in Ghana, its price has even doubled) and a mechanical pressing machine (an expensive investment).

The Sahel is one of the poorest regions in the world, people have nothing. A construction technique to be massively adopted, both by families and masons, must require as little monetary investment as possible.  

Poverty, inappropriate vocational training, lack of jobs and revenues

In the Sahel, almost half of the population lives below the poverty line. Subsistence farming employs 80% of the working population. However, it is mainly seasonal work that keeps farmers busy only during the rainy season (from June to October). Thus, it does not provide employment and income spread over the year. Complementary off-season job opportunities are vital as well as appropriate vocational training. Indeed, the region has one of the lowest school enrolment rates in the world. Many vocational training projects have not had the expected impact due to an overly formalized pedagogical approach (e.g., in training centers), too high expected levels of basic education (given general illiteracy), few professional opportunities, poor consideration of the financial realities of learners, etc. It is therefore essential to provide inclusive dual vocational training (combining on-site learning and inclusive academic modules) fully integrated into a market dynamic creating local employment.

The population growth is estimated to increase by 150% in the Sahel before 2050. The needs for homes, local jobs, and a viable local economy will follow the same trend. The Nubian Vault Association (AVN) is working to solve the massive challenge of providing decent affordable quality housing, adapted to climate change and socio-economic realities in the Sahel, for the many, and as soon as possible.

What is your solution?

Since 2000, our goal has been to develop a large-scale sustainable market for green affordable housing in West Africa, providing vulnerable populations access to low-carbon climate-adapted homes, at the same time as creating green jobs and strengthening economies at all levels.  

1/ The Nubian Vault technique, a construction alternative particularly adapted to climate and socio-economic realities in the Sahel

The Nubian Vault technique (NV) is both ancestral and innovative, based on local materials, economies, and knowledge. This 3,000-year-old architectural technique consists of building houses entirely with mud bricks including the earthen vaulted roof, using local materials with little carbon impact (earth, rocks, and water).

There is no use of timber, tin, cement, or any costly high CO2 footprint imported construction materials. Compared to other construction techniques, it does not require complex equipment or expensive tools, just a brick mould, a bucket, and a wheelbarrow. The Nubian Vault technique is particularly appropriate to the socio-economic realities of the region: simple, inexpensive, and frugal, enabling Sahelian families to self-build their house for the most part.

Nubian Vault buildings are also particularly adapted to extreme climate conditions offering an average gain in thermal comfort of about 7 degrees Celsius and resisting heavy rains and violent winds.

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2/ A market-based approach to ensure the development of a sustainable eco-construction market

The Nubian Vault Association (AVN) has applied a market-oriented approach, thus ensuring the relevance of its solution and creating the endogenous and sustainable engine to enable its large-scale dissemination. Therefore, AVN’s objective is not to build houses but to build a self-sustained Nubian Vault housing market. Our mission is fulfilled when we can withdraw from a locality when the market is strong enough to continue its development on its own over the long term.

To this aim, we are simultaneously:

  • Supporting the offer through a dual vocational training program. AVN has simplified and standardized the technique so it can be readily taught to young rural people with little or no schooling (young farmers with no activity during the dry season). Nearly 1,200 apprentices, masons, and artisans are trained and active in the Nubian Vault market.
  • Supporting the demand by raising awareness about the benefits of the Nubian Vault concept and providing support to kick­starting local Nubian Vault markets. Financial incentives, an essential lever for rapid market growth, are distributed to rural families. At the same time, microfinance operators are encouraged to join to sustainably develop new adapted housing loan products.
  • Supporting a positive business ecosystem by mobilizing all the relevant stakeholders in disseminating the Nubian Vault market and ensuring its perpetuation (operational partners, relay partners including political actors, technical partners, and financial partners).

3/ An operational and replicable methodology enabling a large-scale deployment

A key point of our strategy is the training and transfer of our methodology to operational partners, locally embedded community partners (farmers’ organizations, women’s groups, etc.), incorporating responses to the housing challenge into their missions, thus guaranteeing strong and growing impacts.

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Who does your solution serve, and in what ways will the solution impact their lives?

The entire program primarily targets the most fragile populations within five West African countries, themselves among the poorest countries in the world: Burkina Faso, Mali, Benin, Ghana, and Senegal. Our priority target beneficiaries are rural communities, living mainly from subsistence agriculture and working mainly in an informal economy.

1/ Improving Sahelian rural families' living conditions: Nubian Vault houses offer greatly improved comfort thanks to its natural thermal and acoustic performance, thus improving health conditions.

2/ Providing vocational training and jobs to rural youth: Nubian Vault construction requires the mobilization of a strong local workforce off-season (providing additional cash income during the 6 to 7 months period of agricultural inactivity). Thus, the money traditionally invested in expensive imported construction materials is redirected instead to pay for this local labor force, contributing to local economic reinforcement.

3/ Providing capacity building to community-based organizations (AVN's operational partners): these local actors benefit from training, support, and capacity building from AVN.      


The development of the Nubian Vault housing market contributes to the resilience and stabilization of Sahelian communities, youth vocational training and employment, rural development and local economy reinforcement, and climate adaptation + mitigation.

How are you and your team well-positioned to deliver this solution?

The Nubian Vault Association (AVN) was established in 2000 by Thomas Granier (a French mason), and Séri Youlou (a Burkinabe farmer). They met in Boromo (Burkina Faso), during the PIAMET (a local exhibition of traditional arts) where they first tried to build a Nubian Vault. Thus, our program started in the field and was co-designed by a Burkinabe farmer, who was himself facing the various challenges of the region.  

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Since then, we have maintained this bottom-up culture and proximity to the communities we serve, from which most of the AVN teams in Burkina Faso, Mali, Benin, Ghana, and Senegal (46 people - 4 national offices and 12 regional offices) come. The team in France (10 people) is mainly composed of master’s degree graduates. This diversity and complementarity of backgrounds enable our team to work at the same time with the rural Sahelian communities, as well as with international organizations, Ministries of European and African States.  

Our strength is also our network of 40 operational partners, local community-based organizations such as women’s groups and producers organizations  (-> read more about our operational partners), allowing us to intervene as closely as possible with the targeted rural populations.

The design of the program is continuously being improved, based on the feedback from our teams and operational partners in the field; the masons, and apprentices we train; and of course, the beneficiaries using or living in Nubian Vault buildings.

Which dimension of the Challenge does your solution most closely address?
  • Support informal communities in upgrading to more resilient housing, including financing, design, and low-carbon materials or energy sources.
In what city, town, or region is your solution team headquartered?
Ganges
In what country is your solution team headquartered?
  • France
What is your solution’s stage of development?
  • Scale: A sustainable enterprise working in several communities or countries that is focused on increased efficiency
How many people does your solution currently serve?

6,700 Nubian Vault private and community buildings have been completed since the year 2000, including 1100 built during the 2021-2022 season only.

  • 63,000 direct beneficiaries are living in or using Nubian Vault buildings in 1,700 different localities in 6 countries (Burkina Faso, Mali, Senegal, Mauritania, Ghana, Benin)

Rural Sahelian family living in a Nubian Vault house

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  • 1,320 apprentices, masons, and entrepreneurs have been trained by AVN and are now active with revenues on the Nubian Vault market, including 450 new apprentices in 2022. 

Masons and apprentices building a Nubian Vault house

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Since the beginning of the program, we estimate that 6 million euros have been generated in local economic circuits. Thousands of people benefit from the reinforcement of the local economy.

Why are you applying to Solve?

Scale-up and business model

After more than 20 years the program has proven its worth and is now poised to significantly scale up its operation. To successfully achieve this new step in our journey, we need to access new networks and partners; join a community to share experiences, strategies, difficulties, etc. We will not achieve the change of scale of our program by ourselves, joining the MIT Solve community would be a changemaker.

We would mostly need support to work on the hybridization of our business model. Indeed, as an NGO, we are mostly funded by grants from institutional donors (bilateral aid agencies, multilateral aid organizations, private foundations). One of the difficulties is that donors prefer funding projects over the program. We are struggling to find sufficient, appropriate, and continuous funding to keep developing our program.

Recently we started thinking about developing a complementary business entity – serving our social mission - to generate revenues to mobilize social/impact investors. There are various options and possibilities to explore, we believe it is an important lever for the change of scale. We would need some coaching, advice, and support in this area maybe even sourcing a talent to join our team.

Reading about 2022 MIT Solve Challenge finalists and semi-finalists' business models was really inspiring. Sharing thoughts and experiences on this topic with other Solvers will be a great help!

In which of the following areas do you most need partners or support?
  • Business Model (e.g. product-market fit, strategy & development)
  • Human Capital (e.g. sourcing talent, board development)
Who is the Team Lead for your solution?
Thomas Granier, Co-founder and Director
More About Your Solution
Your Team
Your Business Model & Funding
Solution Team:
Anne-Cécile Ragot
Anne-Cécile Ragot
Fundraising and Partnerships Manager
Thomas Granier
Thomas Granier