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Reconstructing the Historical Layers of a Colonial Prefabricated Wooden House in Old Calabar (1886–2012): Evidence-Based Workflow for Architectural Restoration
by
Olukoya, Obafemi A. P.
in
architectural documentation
/ architectural restoration
/ Archives & records
/ Authenticity
/ Buildings
/ Comparative analysis
/ Cultural heritage
/ Culture
/ Documentation
/ Houses
/ Interviews
/ Laser range finders
/ Morphology
/ National monuments
/ Optical range finders
/ Oral history
/ prefabricated architectural heritage
/ Prefabricated buildings
/ Restoration
/ Statistical analysis
/ Three dimensional models
/ Triangulation
/ Typology
/ wooden architectural heritage
/ Workflow
2025
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Reconstructing the Historical Layers of a Colonial Prefabricated Wooden House in Old Calabar (1886–2012): Evidence-Based Workflow for Architectural Restoration
by
Olukoya, Obafemi A. P.
in
architectural documentation
/ architectural restoration
/ Archives & records
/ Authenticity
/ Buildings
/ Comparative analysis
/ Cultural heritage
/ Culture
/ Documentation
/ Houses
/ Interviews
/ Laser range finders
/ Morphology
/ National monuments
/ Optical range finders
/ Oral history
/ prefabricated architectural heritage
/ Prefabricated buildings
/ Restoration
/ Statistical analysis
/ Three dimensional models
/ Triangulation
/ Typology
/ wooden architectural heritage
/ Workflow
2025
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Do you wish to request the book?
Reconstructing the Historical Layers of a Colonial Prefabricated Wooden House in Old Calabar (1886–2012): Evidence-Based Workflow for Architectural Restoration
by
Olukoya, Obafemi A. P.
in
architectural documentation
/ architectural restoration
/ Archives & records
/ Authenticity
/ Buildings
/ Comparative analysis
/ Cultural heritage
/ Culture
/ Documentation
/ Houses
/ Interviews
/ Laser range finders
/ Morphology
/ National monuments
/ Optical range finders
/ Oral history
/ prefabricated architectural heritage
/ Prefabricated buildings
/ Restoration
/ Statistical analysis
/ Three dimensional models
/ Triangulation
/ Typology
/ wooden architectural heritage
/ Workflow
2025
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Reconstructing the Historical Layers of a Colonial Prefabricated Wooden House in Old Calabar (1886–2012): Evidence-Based Workflow for Architectural Restoration
Journal Article
Reconstructing the Historical Layers of a Colonial Prefabricated Wooden House in Old Calabar (1886–2012): Evidence-Based Workflow for Architectural Restoration
2025
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Overview
The importation of prefabricated buildings into colonies was a prevalent practice during the British colonial expansionist venture. However, in post-colonial Nigeria today, many of these prefabricated houses have either been largely modified or have vanished without architectural or written records. This undocumented disappearance poses a challenge to the development of architectural restoration proposals for the remaining few, especially with the authenticity of materials, as well as their morphology, configuration, use, and function being heavily contested. Among the remaining few that have undergone layers of modifications and are on the verge of total collapse is the Egbo Egbo Bassey House, imported and built in Old Calabar between 1883 and 1886 and declared a National Monument of Nigeria in 1959. Given the dearth of architectural and historical data, this paper aims to reconstruct its architectural morphology, chronological modification, and historical uses and functions, with the view of developing an evidence-based architectural restoration proposal for its adaptive reuse. The data was collected through semi-structured interviews (n = 16), archival research at the National Museum (archival file ID: TF128/C.25/A and TF120/C.20/A), and a measured architectural survey, which was performed using laser tapes and laser rangefinders. Annotated building images were captured using a Canon 5D Mark III and a DJI Marvic 3 drone. Comparative analysis with two other exemplars of prefabricated houses in the region was also conducted to consolidate oral, archival, and field data. Three architectural modification stages, namely 1886, 1959, and 2012, were determined for the analytical framework. Architectural outputs include measured 2-dimensional drawings (scale 1:50) and 3-dimensional models for the three historical stages. The accuracy of each model was ensured through methodical triangulation and confidence rubric ratings. The result of this paper provides a replicable inquiry methodology, which can be used to develop an evidence-based workflow for developing a restoration proposal for architectural heritage in contexts where architectural and historical data are not available or contested. As a limitation, this research does not include an analysis of wood typology, structural testing, and statistical analysis of material.
Publisher
MDPI AG
Subject
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