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University research evaluates case studies of Lida Group’s adaptable modular building system to empower remote indigenous labor camp residents transition to sustainable mobile housing promoting better access to education and healthcare.
2024-Jun-13 10:59:55
By Admin

 

Researchers from Indonesia’s Hasanuddin University have completed field studies analyzing Lida Groups innovative modular construction methodology deployed across remote timber and mining camp settlements sheltering indigenous migrant laborers.

Historically, such ‘mobile villages’ established to house rotational workforces oscillate between makeshift structures hastily abandoned once extraction concludes, stranding residents in limbo lacking alternate housing or social services.

However, standardized modular assembly techniques promise dignified mobility transitioning villages as laborers migrate between concessions. The university’s Faculty of Public Health undertook evaluations assessing impacts on residents’ wellbeing, livelihood continuity and community resilience.

 

 

Key Lida Group pilot sites visited comprised prefabricated modular housing cluster units constructed from durable composite panels assembled within a few weeks. Integrated power, water and furnishings rendered living standards far surpassing container setups.

Unique to the logging frontier setting, field surveys analyzed how standardized modular designs optimized flexibility following extraction cycles without compromising habitability. Key aspects assessed included:

– Housing density, zoning, fixtures supporting integration of interim education/clinic facilities promoting healthcare access during village transitions.

– Relocation logistics correlations with concession schedules ensuring timely secure re-establishment of integrated habitat+services avoiding service gaps compromising vulnerable populations.

– Engagement processes involving residents, contractors and local governments in planning equitable resettlement sustaining inclusive labor-based livelihoods versus dependency.

Preliminary findings indicate carefully planned resettlements bolstered community cohesion by retaining indigenous customs, social structures and territorial connections crucial for marginalized populations’ psychosocial resilience faced with involuntary transitions.

 

 

Standardized modular assembly also proved more cost-efficient versus ad-hoc makeshift construction, liberating funding sustaining mobile villages and services throughout migrants’ frontier residency. Surveys showed improved healthcare accessibility positively impacting health outcomes.

Hasanuddin research fellow Amelia Damanik said: “With extractive industries driving remote development, strategic housing empowers stable inclusive growth protecting frontier livelihoods through dignified mobility standards cooperatively established.”

The university plans strengthened stakeholder partnerships help indigenous workforces transitioned by logging maintain cultural continuity leveraging modular settlements’ mobility for community-led economic diversification away from boom-bust resource extraction cycles.

 

 

Outcomes will guide government policy recognizing informal frontier settlements integrating developmental priorities. Modular assembly systems promise standardized approaches addressing systemic challenges faced by transient indigenous labor populations powering frontier growth through dignified solutions promoting inclusion and healthy resilient lifeways.

In conclusion, evaluating innovative modular methodologies highlights opportunities mobilizing housing design principles to systematically empower remote indigenous populations transition between ephemeral frontier livelihoods through community-centric planning upholding wellbeing, cultural integrity and social networks crucial to marginalized groups’ resilience amid involuntary mobility.

 

 

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