Cover Image
close this book Daughters of Sysiphus
close this folder Premises of the study
View the document Premise one
View the document Premise two
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View the document The need for this study
close this folder Jamaica - A background
View the document Population
View the document Natural hazards and disasters
View the document Economy
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View the document Urban kingston
View the document Historical aspects of the household in Jamaica
View the document Shelter policies
View the document The construction labour force
close this folder Overview of findings and recommendations
View the document Household distribution
View the document Occupations and education
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View the document Density
View the document Tenure and mobility
View the document Physical and social infrastructure
View the document The building process
close this folder Methodology
View the document Low-income household survey
View the document Case studies
View the document Methodological issues
close this folder Education and occupations
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View the document Occupations
View the document The stories behind the figures
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close this folder Expenditure
View the document Expenditure on shelter
View the document Expenditure on food
View the document The stories behind the figures
View the document How to spend a windfall
View the document The stories behind the windfall figures
View the document Differences between men and women in money management
View the document Spending on entertainment
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close this folder Savings and loans
View the document Savings
View the document Attitudes towards the partner
View the document Choices of form of saving
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close this folder Density
View the document Household size
View the document Number of people per room
View the document The yard
View the document The experience behind the figures
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close this folder Mobility and tenure
View the document Mobility
View the document The stories behind the figures
View the document The experience behind the figures
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close this folder Infrastructure - physical and social
View the document Water
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View the document Garbage
View the document Social infrastructure
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close this folder The building process
View the document Building a house
View the document Investing in improvements
View the document The stories behind the figures
View the document Vulnerability to natural hazards
View the document Recommendations
close this folder Conclusions, guidelines and further research
View the document Some guidelines for public-sector housing and shelter agencies
View the document Suggestions for further research
View the document Bibliography
close this folder Annexes
View the document Annex I - Glossary of terms
View the document Annex II - Overview of the women who served as case studies
View the document Annex III - Lena

The building process

The vast majority of housing in Jamaica is built informally, i.e., outside the formal framework of building legislation and approval. Intercensal counts of housing indicate that nearly 70 per cent of all housing is built in this manner. Most is also built without assistance from formal financial institutions.

The majority of informally constructed shelter is built incrementally or, to use a local term, "little-little." A unit starts with one or two rooms and over time additions and improvements are made as the household shelter "evolves". Because of this process few households see their house as complete, even if they may have been living in it and working on it for many years.

The kinds of building technology used depend, to a large degree, not only on the level of financial resources available but also on the land tenure of the household. Renters and those living free are the least likely people to build, expand or improve their houses. People who are paying lease or ground rent are more likely to build and those who own or squat nearly always build.

One of the important features of the building process within the informal sector is the reliance on second-hand and recycled building materials and the vast range of building materials that are used. There is a thriving second-hand building-materials market.

This chapter looks at the building processes used by households interviewed in the low-income household survey and also those used by the women in the case studies.