Emergency Floor: Help Refugees Worldwide “Get Off the Ground”

By Joey Jacobson

Floor Module in Shelter. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor

Floor Module in Shelter. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor

Millions of refugees across the globe, due to global conflict or natural phenomena, are forced to leave their homes and live in low-quality, temporary housing. The majority of these shelters lack a fundamental component of safety and well-being: floors. Emergency Floor is an initiative developed by Sam Brisendine and Scott Key to solve this problem, and bring safety to refugee shelters and the people in them. With their new Indiegogo campaign, Emergency Floor is working to provide efficient, inexpensive flooring that is directly geared towards assisting relief agencies.

Learn more about Emergency Floor after the break.


Underutilized Wood Pallets. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor


Module on Wood Pallet. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor


Floor Module Connection. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor


Unsafe Living Conditions in Refugee Camp. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor


Unsafe Living Conditions in Refugee Camp. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor
Unsafe Living Conditions in Refugee Camp. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor

Underutilized Wood Pallets. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor
Underutilized Wood Pallets. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor

Emergency Floor doesn’t rely on newly manufactured products to spread health and safety to refugee communities — their secret ingredient is wooden shipping pallets. Used for transporting materials in bulk to refugee camps, the pallets are often left underutilized afterwards. Emergency Floor designed a modular flooring system to sit on top of this practically free resource, providing an inexpensive and abundant way to keep families across the world a step above hazardous ground conditions, such as infected soils, flooding, and freezing temperatures.


Sam Brisendine and Scott Key. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor
Sam Brisendine and Scott Key. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor

Module on Wood Pallet. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor
Module on Wood Pallet. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor

Brisendine and Key were graduate students at the Rice University School of Architecture when they developed this idea to keep families healthier and happier across the globe. In partnership with the IKEA Foundation’s Better Shelter program, Emergency Floor was able to test prototypes with families in Iraq, and families in Nepal whose homes fell victim to the recent earthquake.


Unsafe Living Conditions in Refugee Camp. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor
Unsafe Living Conditions in Refugee Camp. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor

Floor Module Connection. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor
Floor Module Connection. Image Courtesy of Emergency Floor

Emergency Floor has gained the support of USAID, provided Brisendine and Key’s initiative can gain independent support as well. Contribute to the Emergency Floor campaign through Indiegogo here.

Source:: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ArchDaily/~3/IyvmxizSZxI/emergency-floor-help-refugees-worldwide-get-off-the-ground

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