‘Breathe House’ goes up in Haiti
The AWFI (American Wood Finishing Institute) team has just returned to Riverstone from Haiti after assisting with the assembly and completion of the “Breathe House” in St. Marc, Haiti.
The University Of Virginia School Of Architecture partnered with AWFI to engineer a surface coating and application process for the “Breathe House.”
According to Energy Center Director of Business Develoment and Operations Kristy Johnson, the newest Haitian Clinic is a prototype of disaster relief housing utilizing structured insulated panel (SIPS) construction methods.
The University of Virginia, Southern Virginia Higher Education Center’s Innovation Center, SIPS of America, AWFI, Huber and the Riverstone Energy Center collaborated on this unique project to develop an engineered solution specifically for temporary housing.
The team’s responsibility was to design, develop and construct a prototype housing unit that could be easily deployed and erected on site in a short period of time to alleviate affected disaster areas, Johnson explained.
This structure required stringent engineering to withstand adverse climate conditions. The occupants will find relief from the elements in a highly efficient and breathable structure, she added.
AWFI performed process engineering research on innovative construction materials to provide a protective and decorative coating solution for the interior and exterior surfaces of the “Breathe House.”