Celebrating World Bamboo Day: Safe houses for 6,000 people with a Hilti Foundation innovation

1,200 low-income families have found a new home thanks to Cement Bamboo Frame Technology, a disaster-resilient construction solution developed by the Hilti Foundation.

More than 150,000 bamboo poles have been used to build safe and affordable houses with the Hilti Foundation’s innovative Cement Bamboo Frame Technology. According to a life cycle analysis, a house built in this way lasts up to 60 years and has 60% less environmental impact compared to a conventional concrete house. This translates to a reduction of 9 tons of CO2 equivalents over the life of the bamboo building.

“Cement Bamboo Frame Technology is not only an affordable innovation, but has less than half the environmental impact compared to cement projects. It significantly extends the lifetime of a house rather than using traditional bamboo. Together with the Hilti Foundation, we aim to create social impact at scale and promote sustainable construction methods,” comments Hilti CEO Christoph Loos.

The innovation consists of a prefabricated and sustainable frame system, made of treated load-bearing bamboo with metal connections and mortar-cement plaster. Being tested for its resistance to earthquakes, typhoons, fires and insect infestation, the technology has high potential in all tropical countries and hazardous regions. It is particularly important in South and East Asia, the South Pacific and Central and South America, where bamboo has always been used as a building material. 

Completed Cement Bamboo Frame Technology houses and their happy new owners in the Philippines. (c) Hilti Foundation / Helmut Wachter.

Origin of Cement Bamboo Frame Technology at Hilti  

It all started in 2012 when a Hilti engineer began testing a building technology that used bamboo as the sole structural element. Later, the Hilti Foundation established the BASE Bahay Foundation and Innovation Center, in Manila, to apply and promote the safe, affordable and sustainable construction solution. So far, more than 1,200 houses have been built, mainly in the Philippines and Nepal, and large-scale construction will now be implemented together with partner organizations.  

A worker in a bamboo treatment facility in the Philippines. (c) Hilti Foundation / Fairpicture: Alecs Ongcal. 

“Adequate housing is a human right, and yet an estimated 1.6 billion people worldwide – that’s one in four – live in substandard housing.  Experts predict that this number will nearly double, to 3 billion, by 2030. Creating new affordable and sustainable housing for these people is a major task that impacts not only their safety and health, but also their economic and social opportunities,” says Werner Wallner, CEO of the Hilti Foundation.

Meanwhile, the Innovation Center has attracted strong and renowned academic and business partners from around the world: ETH Zurich from Switzerland, Coventry University from Great Britain, De La Salle University from the Philippines, and ARUP, a well-known design agency from the United Kingdom, to name a few. Together, they are conducting studies and research on bamboo as a building material, developing new application methods and also working on standards for safe use in construction. 

Cement Bamboo Frame Model at BASE Bahay Foundation, in the Philippines. (c) Hilti Foundation

World Bamboo Day

Bamboo poles undergo a multi-step process of washing, drying, quality control and treatment to make them durable for construction. © Alecs Ongcal / Hilti Foundation

Since 2009, World Bamboo Day has been celebrated every September 18 to draw attention to this natural and highly renewable resource. Thanks to the Hilti Foundation’s innovative building technology, bamboo construction is becoming increasingly popular in social housing. It is extremely sustainable and 15-20% less expensive compared to conventional buildings of the same quality. 

About BASE Bahay Foundation

Luis Felipe Lopez, Head of Technology at BASE Bahay Foundation, testing bamboo in the Innovation Center in the Philippines.

The BASE Bahay Foundation is a pioneering nonprofit organization established by the Hilti Foundation in 2014. BASE provides alternative building technologies like the Cement Bamboo Frame Technology (CBFT) to enable a network of partners to build affordable, sustainable, and disaster-resistant homes for families in need. In 2021, BASE opened its Innovation Center which serves as a research and training center for Cement Bamboo Frame Technology, and plays an active role in promoting its technology by builders and government authorities.

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