Development of Sustainable Low-Cost Building Materials Using Locally Available Resources

Authors

  • Engr. Richard Chinenye Udeala Federal Polytechnic Ukana, Akwa Ibom State. Author
  • Arc. Ojiugo Richard Federal Polytechnic Ukana, Akwa Ibom State. Author
  • Nwose Sebastian Azonwenu Author

Keywords:

Recycled plastic bricks, Rice husk ash, Bamboo, Laterite, Affordable housing, Sustainable construction

Abstract

Nigeria faces a severe housing deficit of over 25–28 million units, driven by high construction costs and reliance on imported materials. This study explores sustainable, low-cost building materials sourced locally including laterite, bamboo, rice husk ash (RHA), palm kernel shells (PKS), and recycled plastics as alternatives for affordable housing. A multidisciplinary literature-based approach was adopted, integrating civil engineering, environmental science, and architectural perspectives. Results indicate that these indigenous materials can achieve acceptable structural performance (e.g., laterite blocks and RHA-blended concrete reached strengths comparable to conventional materials, and bamboo’s tensile capacity rivals steel). Significant cost savings were identified, with some alternatives up to 30–50% cheaper than traditional materials. Environmentally, these options greatly reduce construction’s carbon footprint by cutting energy use (laterite), sequestering carbon (bamboo), repurposing waste (RHA, PKS), and diverting plastic from pollution. The discussion addresses policy implications, recommending measures like updated building codes, local material incentives, pilot projects (e.g., bamboo housing), and public awareness to overcome adoption barriers. In conclusion, leveraging Nigeria’s abundant local resources for construction is a viable pathway toward more affordable, climate-resilient housing development reducing dependence on costly imports provided that supportive policies, standards, and further research are implemented.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

  • Engr. Richard Chinenye Udeala, Federal Polytechnic Ukana, Akwa Ibom State.

    Deptartment of Civil Engineering Technology

  • Arc. Ojiugo Richard, Federal Polytechnic Ukana, Akwa Ibom State.

    Department of Architectural Technology

  • Nwose Sebastian Azonwenu

    Department of Civil Engineering Technology

References

Abdulazeez, A. S., Yunusa, U., Mohammed, T., & Hamza, B.(2022). Strength performance of concrete produced with rice husk ash as partial replacement of cement. African Journal of Environmental Sciences and Renewable Energy, 5(1), 1–15.

Brickify. (2024). Plastic waste to bricks for low-cost housing – Project profile. New Africa Fund. Retrieved from https://www.newafricafund.org/our-grantees/brickify

Ibemere, D. (2025, June 13). FG plans to build bamboo houses for Nigerians as traders quote new price for Dangote, BUA cement. Legit.ng News. Retrieved from https://www.legit.ng/business-economy/industry/1659551-fg-announces-plan-build-bamboo-houses-names-beneficiaries/

Mmuo, C. (2024, February 20). Alternative building materials in Nigeria. ScienceNaija. Retrieved from https://sciencenaija.com/alternative-building-materials-in-nigeria

Mohammed, A. K., Ajiboye, S. E., Zubar, F. L., & Onuche, A. S. (2021). Strength characterization and cost efficiency of using palm kernel shell in lightweight concrete for pavement works. The International Journal of Engineering and Science (IJES), 10(9), 50–54. https://doi.org/10.9790/1813-1009015054

Mudi Yar’ Adua, M., & Kakale, A. U. (2016). Sustainable environment: Laterite as sustainable building materials in the construction industry. International Journal of Advances in Mechanical and Civil Engineering, 3(2), 70–73. Retrieved from http://ijamce.iraj.in/paper_detail.php?paper_id=4328

Odii, J. (2025, June 11). Nigeria’s bamboo gamble amid soaring construction costs. ModernGhana. Retrieved from https://www.modernghana.com/news/1409300/nigerias-bamboo-gamble-amid-soaring-construction.html

Staff Writer. (2024, September 9). From Nigeria to Kenya: Entrepreneurs turning Africa’s plastic waste into wealth. How We Made It In Africa. Retrieved from https://www.howwemadeitinafrica.com/from-nigeria-to-kenya-entrepreneurs-turning-africas-plastic-waste-into-wealth/174792/

Additional Files

Published

2025-07-18

Issue

Section

Science, Engineering and Innovation

How to Cite

Udeala, E. R. C., Ojiugo, A. R., & Azonwenu, N. S. (2025). Development of Sustainable Low-Cost Building Materials Using Locally Available Resources. Academic World-Journal of Scientific and Engineering Innovation , 2(1). https://academicworldpublisher.co.uk/index.php/awjsei/article/view/67

Similar Articles

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.