From Scaffolds to Structures: India's Unfinished Journey with Bamboo
Briefly

Bamboo scaffolding represents a blend of traditional skills and contemporary building methods across Asia. In Hong Kong, it contributes to the city's iconic skyline, yet its use is diminishing. Conversely, in India, cities like Mumbai are characterized by glass towers supported by bamboo scaffolding, highlighting a disparity with the materials used indoors. Despite bamboo's local abundance, modern architecture favors reinforced concrete and steel, revealing a contradiction within the construction industry that struggles to embrace bamboo for lasting structures.
Hong Kong's skyline is shaped by intricate bamboo scaffolding, yet this time-honored craft is steadily vanishing from the region. Modern Indian architecture speaks in the language of reinforced concrete and imported steel.
In Mumbai's urban landscape, lofting glass towers are wrapped in bamboo scaffolding which dwarfs permanent structures. Ironically, bamboo, abundant locally, disappears inside these buildings.
Read at ArchDaily
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