JEAN PROUVÉ + ATELIER LWD
BUNGALOW DU CAMEROUN 1964
BUNGALOW DU CAMEROUN STANDARD MODEL WITH SINGLE MODULE (1958-1964)
Modular template 8,75 x 8,75 m delimited by four bearing posts.
Can be assembled in one or two modules. Height under dropped ceiling
in living unit 2,93 m. Height to ridge beam 3,61 m.
Prouvé designed a prototype of the metal frame « Habitat tropical pour zone humide » in 1958, a single examplar of which was built by Constructions Jean Prouvé in association with the Travaux d’Afrique firm. It materialized his advanced research aimed at providing an industrial solution for habitat in tropical countries, and in particular for Black Africa.
It was this prototype that was put on show at the Friche de l’Escalette in 2016.
After simplifying the prototype, and replacing the costly all-metal frame in favour of one made from locally milled timber, in 1964 collaborative research between Jean Prouvé as consulting engineer and the Atelier d’architecture LWD (Lagneau, Weill & Dimitrijevic), led to the production of a set of classrooms and housing for teachers, launched in Cameroun after an international competition funded by the nascent European union.
The aluminium ‘wave’ panels designed by Jean Prouvé to clad the different versions of this structure were without doubt their defining feature, conferring on them an eye-catching identity both inside and out.
But apart from purely aesthetic qualities, this type of cladding also provided perfect natural ventilation so efficient as to render unnecessary any recourse to mechanized heat control. Things like this show that Jean Prouvé was way ahead of his time. His preliminary tests using perforated sheet metal go back to the 1930s, and the first prototype for the tropical house for Niamey (Niger) was made in 1947-1949. But his concept is a perfect response to climate change and its corollary: the urgent need to impose measures for energy saving while reducing emissions of CO2.