Monday, April 5, 2021

Summary + Reader Response_Draft 4

 

In the article, “An Architect’s Guide to Building with Bamboo”, Vadot (n.d) states that bamboo is a reliable and sustainable future construction material. The author finds that bamboo flourishes well across the world with little maintenance and grows more near the equator. He adds that it is best to harvest the bamboo when it is between four and six years old so that it becomes construction-grade material, and often, it is referred to as steel’s alternative. Bamboo is naturally protected against microorganisms from "cut close to its base" harvest method. The author asserts that bamboo is an incredibly lightweight material that can be used to accomplish stable, weight-bearing structures that cannot be overlooked in the construction industry. Bamboo is lightweight, easy and affordable to transport, and low cost when bought near the plantation. Finally, Vadot highlights that bamboo is fragile and there is no standard design code for 1200 species of bamboo. While the author focused on advantages, he should also elaborate on the disadvantages. In fact, he should explain the advantages and disadvantages systematically.

First of all, the article does not clearly describe all the benefits of bamboo. The author just briefly explains bamboo’s strength and construction use. I feel that Vadot’s article requires more description of bamboo’s strength with concrete evidence and how it is used in construction industry, rather than just giving a few examples. There is no coherence in Vadot’s explanation. In the article, Kim et al. (2019), gave further explanations the features of bamboo, workability strength and its uses with examples and reference relevant articles to support his explanation. I feel that this article is complete. It also has a broader perspective of the property of bamboo and its uses that correspond to its strength. Vadot could have developed his article by focusing on a few points and explaining them in depth, which would increase the weight of his points.

 Secondly, Vadot mentions that it is difficult to create a standard code for 1200 species of bamboo. Now is this an advantage or a disadvantage? There is no connexion of this statement to his entire article. Furthermore Suhaily et al. (2013) explain that there are 1575 different species of bamboo and ranging from woody to bamboo. Out of all these, only 20-38 species are suitable for construction material. I notice that there is contradicting information in both articles. I doubt Vadot’s credibility as he has not elaborated on the total number of bamboo species. Furthermore, I reckon that the article is lacking supporting information with verification that weigh down the article’s reputation. Furthermore, the author states that the bamboo is naturally protected against

 microorganisms. However, Deka  et al. (2003) explain that bamboo must be treated to protect it from termites, an issue that was supported by their experiments. Once again, there is conflicting information in both articles that topples Vadot's reputation and baffles the reader if Vadot had done good research on bamboo.

 

Lastly, Vadot states that bamboo is fragile, but there is no further explanation to it. At the same time, in the article Jasondreamwork, (2016) describes that while bamboo has short life span, it is prone to crush at weak joints, it has low structural efficiently and it shrinks. Bamboo has fair number of disadvantages, which are ignored in Vadot’s article. In my opinion, Vadot fails to highlight both advantages and disadvantages equally that makes his article be one sided. From his article, I do not learn much about bamboo that make me harder to conclude or recommend it to others who love to use bamboo for their home.

 

In a nutshell, bamboo has its own good and bad qualities. If  Vadot had explained all the qualities and reinforced it with more evidence, his article would be well grounded.  

 

 

 References

Valot, C. (n.d). An Architect’s Guide to Building with Bamboo. Architizer.   Blog at architizer.com

    https://architizer.com/blog/practice/details/how-to-bamboo/  

Manandhar, R., Kim, J.H., & Kim, J.T. (2019, May 2). Environmental, social and economic sustainability of bamboo and bamboo-based construction materials in buildings. Journal of Asian Architecture and Building Engineering18(2), 49-59.

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13467581.2019.1595629

Suhaily et al. (2013). Bamboo based biocomposites material, design and applicationsBooks of Materials Science, published June 10th 2013. DOI:10.5772.56057

https://scholar.google.com/scholar_lookup?hl=en&publication_year=2013&pages=489-517&author=S.+S.+Suhaily&author=H.+P.+S.+A.+Khalil&author=W.+O.+W.+Nadirah&author=M.+Jawaidauthor=Y.+Mastai&title=Bamboo+Based+Biocomposites+Material%2C+Design+and+Applications

Deka M, Das P, Saikia C.N, (January 2003). Studies on dimensional stability, thermal degradation and termite resistant properties of bamboo (Bambusa tulda Roxb.) treated with thermosetting resins. Journal of Bamboo and Rattern 2(1):29-41

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/233580520_Studies_on_dimensional_stability_thermal_degradation_and_termite_resistant_properties_of_bamboo_Bambusa_tulda_Roxb_treated_with_thermosetting_resins

Jasondreamwork. (May 21 2016). Disadvantage of Bamboo As A Construction Material. Blog at Wordpress.com, published 2016.

https://jasondreamwork.wordpress.com/2016/05/21/disadvantage-of-bamboo/

 


2 comments:

  1. Thank you, Saira, for the rewrite. There's an odd problem with the formatting though. Let's talk about this. You may have to repost.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Dear Brad,

    Thank you for your comments. I have issue on this and I had tried my best to rectify it.

    Thank you

    Regards,

    Saira

    ReplyDelete

Summary + Reader Response_Draft 4

  In the article, “An Architect’s Guide to Building with Bamboo”, Vadot (n.d) states that bamboo is a reliable and sustainable future constr...