Stone Town Conservation - These Guidelines have been drawn up to protect the traditional character of the Stone Town. The Stone Town is very special. There is nowhere else in the world like Zanzibar Stone Town. Visitors come from from all over the world to see it. There is nothing like the Stone Town in the rest of Tanzania. It is one of the things that makes Zanzibar different from the Mainland, and special. It is an important part of the island's unique cultural identity. Zanzibar should be proud of its Stone Town. <br><br>The Stone Town is the embodiment of Zanzibar's long and great history. It is proof that the island was once the greatest power in Africa, and a great Islamic state. But the Stone Town is delicate. As times change, people wish to change their buildings, or need to carry out repairs. But these changes, unless properly guided, can destroy the Stone Town's special character. Like a shell on the beach, slowly eroded by the waves, each change takes something away, and soon the Stone Town will lose its beauty and fineness, and become like a pebble. If the Stone Town is destroyed, visitors will no longer come to Zanzibar, and the economy will suffer. The best way to preserve the special character of the Stone Town is to repair and maintain buildings using the correct methods, but otherwise to leave them as they are. If changes cannot be avoided, then the changes must be influenced by these Guidelines.<br><br>The law requires anyone wanting to do building work in the Stone Town to first ask permission from the STCDA. The STCDA's job is to guide people wishing to do building work so that the changes they make and the building methods they use do not destroy the special character of the Stone Town. The STCDA will judge the building application according to these Guidelines. If the building application follows the Good Practice Guidelines, approval by the STCDA will be quicker and easier.<br><br>House No. 1287 is a very simple two-story building. Accommodation on the ground floor consists of three interconnected rectangular rooms. Principal access is via a simple small door set in the west elevation. This provides direct access to a narrow entrance room, which at its far end contains a<br>crude dog-leg staircase leading to the first floor. The entrance room provides access in the west to a small kitchen and wash room. This is the only room in the house with a water supply. A manhole in the east gives access to a toilet-pit beneath. A door in the north of the entrance room gives access to a bed/sitting room, a corner of which is crudely partitioned to form a changing and washing area. To the north of this room is a pair of handsome double doors providing access to a small rear lane. Currently the doors are sealed closed. The floor plan established on the ground floor is repeated in the first floor. The head of the dog-leg staircase gives access to a narrow landing. To the south is a toilet room and store. Sewage disposal is via a vertical cast iron pipe feeding directly into the toilet pit under the room below. North of the landing is a bedroom. Access to the flat roof is via a simple open stair rising from the west of the landing.<br><br>Source: Aga Khan Trust for Culture

Case Study: House 1287, Kiponda

Type
book section
Year
2001
These Guidelines have been drawn up to protect the traditional character of the Stone Town. The Stone Town is very special. There is nowhere else in the world like Zanzibar Stone Town. Visitors come from from all over the world to see it. There is nothing like the Stone Town in the rest of Tanzania. It is one of the things that makes Zanzibar different from the Mainland, and special. It is an important part of the island's unique cultural identity. Zanzibar should be proud of its Stone Town.

The Stone Town is the embodiment of Zanzibar's long and great history. It is proof that the island was once the greatest power in Africa, and a great Islamic state. But the Stone Town is delicate. As times change, people wish to change their buildings, or need to carry out repairs. But these changes, unless properly guided, can destroy the Stone Town's special character. Like a shell on the beach, slowly eroded by the waves, each change takes something away, and soon the Stone Town will lose its beauty and fineness, and become like a pebble. If the Stone Town is destroyed, visitors will no longer come to Zanzibar, and the economy will suffer. The best way to preserve the special character of the Stone Town is to repair and maintain buildings using the correct methods, but otherwise to leave them as they are. If changes cannot be avoided, then the changes must be influenced by these Guidelines.

The law requires anyone wanting to do building work in the Stone Town to first ask permission from the STCDA. The STCDA's job is to guide people wishing to do building work so that the changes they make and the building methods they use do not destroy the special character of the Stone Town. The STCDA will judge the building application according to these Guidelines. If the building application follows the Good Practice Guidelines, approval by the STCDA will be quicker and easier.

House No. 1287 is a very simple two-story building. Accommodation on the ground floor consists of three interconnected rectangular rooms. Principal access is via a simple small door set in the west elevation. This provides direct access to a narrow entrance room, which at its far end contains a
crude dog-leg staircase leading to the first floor. The entrance room provides access in the west to a small kitchen and wash room. This is the only room in the house with a water supply. A manhole in the east gives access to a toilet-pit beneath. A door in the north of the entrance room gives access to a bed/sitting room, a corner of which is crudely partitioned to form a changing and washing area. To the north of this room is a pair of handsome double doors providing access to a small rear lane. Currently the doors are sealed closed. The floor plan established on the ground floor is repeated in the first floor. The head of the dog-leg staircase gives access to a narrow landing. To the south is a toilet room and store. Sewage disposal is via a vertical cast iron pipe feeding directly into the toilet pit under the room below. North of the landing is a bedroom. Access to the flat roof is via a simple open stair rising from the west of the landing.

Source: Aga Khan Trust for Culture

Citation

Battle, Stephen and Tony Steel. "Case Study: House 1287, Kiponda". In Conservation and Design Guidelines for Zanzibar Stone Town. Geneva: Aga Khan Trust for Culture, 2001.

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Tanzania

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