Anthracite Tracks

Name
Chloe Liang Xiuling
Education degree
Kandidat
Fagfelt
Architecture
Institute
Architecture and Technology
Program
Architecture and Extreme Environments
Year
2022

Developing social architecture that breathes life into remnants of the past to pave the way towards a sustainable future

Anthracite Tracks is a thesis project that investigates the possibility of utilising the waste products of mining in order to create a resilient community in Jerada, a city in Morocco. It proposes developing an environment for the community to be engaged in utilising Jerada’s mine waste as an additive to ceramics and clay-based building materials.

The mixed-use architecture consists of residential floors, workshop floors, an elevated community square, and a level for sorting and storing mine waste and fly ash.

The material footprint of extraction

The mining industry in Morocco contributes to over a fifth of the nation's export value; but because of outdated laws and aggressive extraction, the country does not have any effective system to manage the vast amounts of waste produced by the nation's mines. With over 70% of the country's 240 mines closed, graveyards of abandoned rigs and endless seas of mine waste litter the country, and Jerada is no exception.

Once Morocco's biggest producer of coal and a fast-growing economy, rising operational costs caused the company in charge of the mine to close in 2001, plunging over 7000 people into unemployment and sentencing Jerada to economic, social, and infrastructural stagnation for the past two decades. Beyond the instability from unemployment, Jerada contains within its urban borders a staggering amount of mine waste – over 20 million tonnes.

A 95 meter tall mountain of mine waste in Jerada
Exploded isometric showing circulation and functions

Visualising the project

Anthracite Tracks presents the possibility of having mine waste from all around Morocco brought in to be a part of this movement of upcycling through creation, while providing an environment dedicated to celebrating the process and sharing the knowledge with everyone. The architecture takes the form of a building with predetermined spaces along with areas that have the suggestion of what it could be sketched out through the inclusion of a structural framework and open lots. The final evolution of the architecture is left up to those who reside within it, whereby the environment will be shaped by successive inhabitants.

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Programme for Anthracite Tracks

The Royal Danish Academy supports the Sustainable Development Goals

Since 2017 the Royal Danish Academy has worked with the Sustainable Development Goals. This is reflected in our research, our teaching and in our students’ projects. This project relates to the following UN goal(-s)
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