| About 2,680 results  | books.google.com As a result the towns and cities which were practically having no privately owned
houses, now have a good number of ... In 1969 out of 879,134 dwelling units (not
rooms), 45.73 per cent were constructed with pole and dagga walls, 25.92 per ... |
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 | books.google.com There were very large houses at Great Zimbabwe in the sixteenth century, for
instance, and large houses appeared ... to safeguard their food.121' Common
building materials were the same as those used in houses — pole and dagga
with ... |
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 | books.google.com Jonathan Crush, Daniel S. Tevera - 2010 - 416 pages - More editions Other farmers reserved brick houses for permanent workers but placed seasonal
workers in run-down pole and dagga huts, dilapidated brick houses, or whatever
the workers could make on their own. And then there were farms on which the ... |
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 | books.google.com Land Tenure & Poverty in Africa and the Caribbean Robert Home, Hilary Lim. the
south, while ... A KCC survey of squatter settlements (1973) found 119 houses
there, built mainly of pole-and-dagga with corrugated iron roofing. At that time,
the ... |
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 | books.google.com The pole and dagga house is, however, being increasingly replaced by
kimberley brick houses of more generous proportions which permit subdivision of
the buildings into two, three or more rooms. The size of such houses is often
limited by ... |
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 | books.google.com The pole and dagga house is, however, being increasingly replaced by
kimberley brick houses of more generous proportions which permit subdivision of
the buildings into two, three or more rooms. The size of such houses is often
limited by ... |
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 | books.google.com 5 Const ructi on and Roofing Materials Nearly 40.0 cent of the housing units were
constructed with either burnt brick, stone or concrete and the dwellings built with
poles and dagga and Kimberly bricks accounted for 27.5 and 23.8 per cent ... |
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 | books.google.com The construction of round pole and dagga houses has been traced back to the
Early Iron Age, whose life contrasted sharply with the Early Stone Age. It is
believed that methods of food production, both agriculture and animal
domestication, ... |
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 | books.google.com /10/ The relative frequency and scale of their operations is likely to increase as
suitable construction poles for building pole and dagga houses become
increasingly difficult to find. These activities might substantially effect the national
energy ... |
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 | books.google.com few grass houses, nearly all (97.6%) were of pole and dagga, 7.1% of the total
having metal roofs. Metal roofing was more prevalent at Solel Boneh (18.4%).
Only one of the metal roofed houses at Shillings Kaseba exceeded the standard
of ... |
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