What began as a seemingly casual exchange, an online (Archinsight Interactive session) remark noting the project’s boldness quickly expanded into a broader, more critical dialogue. Contributors to the discussion described the building as “simple but bold,” affirming that “less is indeed more,” while others expressed surprise at its completion and functionality. Beneath these initial reactions, however, lay a deeper inquiry: what does it mean for earth arguably one of the oldest building materials on the continent to re-emerge as a contemporary architectural statement?
Material Rediscovery and the Politics of Perception
Earth construction is neither novel nor experimental within the African context. From Sahelian mosques to forest-zone compounds, its applications have long demonstrated climatic adaptability, structural ingenuity, and cultural resonance. Yet, in many contemporary urban and academic settings, these same materials are burdened by altered perceptions often associated with rurality, temporariness, or economic limitation.
However, this critique requires careful unpacking.
Architecture Schools and the Question of Acceptance
Contrary to assumptions of outright dismissal, many African schools of architecture including KNUST have sustained long-standing engagements with indigenous materials, sustainability, and contextual design. The issue, as articulated in more measured responses, is not the use of earth per se, but the quality of its architectural deployment.
Demonstrated understanding of material behavior
Structural and tectonic coherence
Climatic and environmental performance
Precision in detailing and construction logic
The translation of concept into buildable form
From this perspective, the celebrated quality of Adjaye’s work lies less in its material palette than in its execution. Earth, in this instance, is not treated as an aesthetic signifier or nostalgic gesture, but as a disciplined architectural medium handled with clarity, control, and maturity.
Execution and Intent: Reframing the Debate
It is within this distinction between intent and execution that the “vernacular bout” truly resides. Vernacular architecture, when superficially invoked, risks devolving into pastiche: the replication of forms without the underlying systems of knowledge that give them meaning. The use of mud walls or laterite blocks, absent rigorous exploration, does not inherently produce architecture of value.
Adjaye’s studio exemplifies this approach. Its significance lies not in its evocation of tradition, but in its advancement of it, through careful calibration of form, structure, and material expression.
Continuities in Practice: Beyond the Present Moment
Importantly, the current discourse should not be mistaken for a new awakening. As noted by practitioners reflecting on their own academic experiences decades prior, explorations of earth construction ranging from large-span domes to culturally embedded spatial systems have long existed within African architectural education.
What appears to be shifting is not the presence of such ideas, but their visibility and validation within a global architectural narrative.
This raises an essential point: the work of architects like Adjaye gains international recognition not merely because it is rooted in local materiality, but because it meets, and often exceeds, the technical and conceptual standards expected within global practice.
Pedagogy as Productive Friction
The role of architectural education in this context is both critical and complex. Studio culture, by design, operates through critique, a process that can be perceived as adversarial, yet is fundamentally intended to refine and strengthen ideas.
Students proposing vernacular material strategies are therefore challenged not to abandon them, but to defend and develop them rigorously. The demand is for ownership: an ability to articulate why a material is chosen, how it performs, and what it contributes to the architectural proposition.
This process, while demanding, is essential. It ensures that projects grounded in indigenous practices are not insulated from scrutiny, but are instead elevated through it.
Toward a More Integrated Future
The discourse surrounding earth construction and vernacular architecture in African schools ultimately reveals a misalignment, not of values, but of expectations.
Bridging this gap necessitates a more integrated approach:
Expanding material research within studio curricula
Strengthening links between craft knowledge and engineering systems
Encouraging critical, rather than romantic, engagement with tradition
Fostering confidence in defending alternative design approaches
Conclusion: Building What We Believe
The renewed attention to earth architecture, catalyzed by projects such as Adjaye’s studio, offers an opportunity to recalibrate the discourse. It invites a shift away from binary oppositions modern versus traditional, global versus local toward a more nuanced understanding of architectural practice as a continuum.
Ultimately, the question is not whether vernacular materials should be used, but how well they are used.
The true measure of success lies not in the invocation of earth as a symbol, but in its transformation into architecture that is precise, performative, and enduring.
In this sense, the “vernacular bout” is not a contest between materials or ideologies. It is a test of discipline of the architect’s ability to align intent with execution, and to build, with conviction, what they believe... [to be continued]
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Images Credit: Mutahi Chiira (via Africans Column)


