The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis

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The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis

Information

  • Project Name: The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials
  • Practice: Morphogenesis
  • Completion year: 2020
  • Gross Built up Area: 10000 ft²
  • Project Location: Rishikesh, Uttarakhand
  • Country: India
  • Lead Architects/Designer: Ar. Sonali Rastogi, Ar. Aarushi Juneja
  • Clients: Mountain Valley Springs India
  • Structural Consultants: Mr. Suneet Prasad
  • MEP Consultants: Stellar India
  • Landscape Consultants: Morphogenesis
  • Contractors: Abdul Constructions
  • Photo Credits: Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome
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Excerpt: The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials by Morphogenesis addresses sociocultural and economic sustainability. The design team had the chance to modify traditional building methods to create a modern production facility thanks to the brand’s philosophy of merging ancient wisdom with cutting-edge beauty. A strong architectural expression that contextually fits in and fosters community pride was achieved using passive design ideas and local building methods.

Project Description

The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome
The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome

[Text as submitted by architect] The Lodsi community project for Forest Essentials is nestled in the Himalayan foothills, along the banks of the river Ganges, in Rishikesh, India. The design brief stipulated by the client outlined the construction of a manufacturing facility for a modern skincare company that focuses on reviving the ancient science of Ayurveda. The brand’s philosophy of infusing ancient wisdom with contemporary aesthetics presented the design team with an opportunity to adapt vernacular construction techniques to create a contemporary production facility.

The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome
The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
Site Plan © Morphogenesis
The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome

The design approach and development of the facility were highly specific to the site’s topography, climate, and immediate context. It has been designed in a manner that does not exceed the footprint of the previously existing structure. Furthermore, the location of the site and the limited availability of resources determined the budgetary and building constraints for the project. Therefore, the firm set out to achieve a net-zero and energy-efficient building through an integrated design approach, resulting in a free-running and off-grid production unit.

The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome
The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
Ground Floor Plan © Morphogenesis
The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome

The built form draws inspiration from the traditional Garwahli ‘kholi’ (house). A rectilinear volume oriented along the east-west axis has been planned with a central entry that divides the facility into two parts. Functions that require a cooler environment (herb grinding, packaging, and storage) are located on the upper floor, whereas the preparatory functions with high internal heat gain are located on the lower floor.

The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome
The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
Section © Morphogenesis
The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
First Floor Plan © Morphogenesis
The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome

The North-South-oriented butterfly roof form allows large openable windows that allow the prevailing North-East and South-East winds for ventilation, with 80% naturally day-lit spaces and unobstructed views of the valley. The high-volume of space with operable clerestory windows enforces Bernoulli’s principle and moderates indoor temperatures. A central light well forms a multi-purpose communal space. This also doubles up as a mother-and-child wellness camp and for students post-school.

The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome
The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome

Passive design strategies and indigenous construction techniques resulted in a strong architectural expression that contextually blends in and builds community pride. Façade shading, window-to-wall ratio, and building materials were optimised to ensure a high-thermal mass façade, resulting in an energy-efficient building envelope with an EPI of 38 kWh/m2/year. A solar roof generating 55 kWp offsets the facility’s requirements and creates a surplus to supply back to the grid, hence rendering the design ‘Energy+’. A site-specific rainwater collection, storage tank, and treatment system, as well as an effluent treatment plant, offset the water requirements.

The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome
The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome
The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome

Waste materials at the site have been repurposed and used, e.g., reclaimed wooden rafters as light fixtures, waste purlin sections as tube light holders, stone chisels as door handles, re-bar as wash basin pedestals, and others. Any organic by-product is reused or composted. This project is net-zero on energy, water, and waste. The planning incorporated the existing ‘gaushala’ (cow shed) to produce milk-based products.

The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome
The Lodsi Community Project for Forest Essentials | Morphogenesis
© Noughts & Crosses LLP, Andre Fanthome

Sixty-five villagers built the project, and the building supports 45% of the village households directly and the entire village indirectly. The use of vernacular materials, techniques, and village labour forms the ethos of the facility, making it “a project for the locals, built by the locals, and for the employment of the locals.” The Lodsi Community Project addresses sociocultural and economic sustainability. It is an example of decentralised development in the post-pandemic world. This project stayed functional through most of the pandemic, and the designers believe this is the exemplar for future growth across India.

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