Cool, cooler, cooling, cooling…...
Many of us like to believe that Jharokhas are a unique feature of the Havelis that dot
dry, dusty Rajasthan. They offer
the purdah bound ladies private entertainment of the goings on of the outside
world, the streets outside the havelis
and the acitivities in the courtyards inside.
Plus, the perforated sculpture of the jharokhas filters the harsh glare of the desert sun,
offers shade and therefore cool too.
These styles are common to most of the Arab world, again
desert. Popularly called Mashrabiya, those are
less of sculpture and more wood and glass lightweight, serving the same
purpose: private viewing for purdah bound ladies; since most are on street homes of the
wealthier people, the cool shade is free for both the ladies and the pedestrians
on the streets below.
The designs of the
latticework have smaller openings at the bottom and larger ones higher up to
allow for efficient movement of drafts.
What of the hoi polio? The ones with no access to ACs, coolers,
fridges etc, summer staples of middle
and upper middle class India --
residents of societies and premium condominiums that draw their labor from the roasted slums
next door.
For them life is even more
difficult as their tin sheds get ultra heated, even though they are tightly
enough packed to minimize the sun’s rays.
Placing wet gunny bags on the roof is a great cooling device ---- but
for the fact that every summer, water is at such a premium that we who live in
comfort will never realize.
Many innovations have been
floated for ‘low cost’ cooling, everyone of them requiring considerable
investment. Recently one has come from
Grameen in Bangladesh, as simple to put together as low cost.
A simple sturdy sheet, may be
thick cardboard sheets (like those our
ACs, fridges and coolers come in) pasted together or a plywood/ metal /tin sheet, anything that
can support a couple dozen large
empty water/cold drink bottles. The sheet is perforated and the holes protected
with rubber rings to allow inserting the bottles with all the necks in on
direction, after the bottoms have been sliced off.
The bottle laden sheet is
placed into an inset in the wall of the hutment; hot air from outside enters the bigger end of
the bottles and is cooled as it passes through the narrow segment to come out
at least 5 degrees cooler inside the house. Viola, a low cost, no electricity,
home made air cooler for a hutment.
Let us see how many of our
elite and not-so-elite societies will cotton on to this idea, start a
collection drive for empty bottles from the dozens they guzzle at home and in
their clubs and pubs and plus may be, apart from may be hundred ruppes per home
to help out the people who come to make their lives comfortable with their
labor.
Comments
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