Time names Indian architect Alok Shetty ‘leader of tomorrow’

September 20, 2014 12:04 pm | Updated 12:13 pm IST - New York

The houses designed by Alok Shetty are affordable and easy to set up as it takes only four hours to erect and dismantle them.

The houses designed by Alok Shetty are affordable and easy to set up as it takes only four hours to erect and dismantle them.

A 28-year-old Indian architect has been named “young leader of tomorrow” by Time magazine for his pioneering work in designing affordable flood-proof houses for slum dwellers.

Alok Shetty is among “leaders of tomorrow” who are “working hard to change their worlds today,” Time said as it named six inspirational young persons in its first class of “next generation leaders“.

Time said Mr. Shetty is “building hope in India” as an architect who is “finding simple solutions to complex problems.”

Mr. Shetty, working with the Bangalore-based non-profit Parinaam Foundation, is designing homes for hundreds of slum dwellers whose makeshift houses flood during the heavy rains and become breeding grounds for diseases like malaria.

He designed flood-proof houses, costing USD 300, out of discarded scaffolding, bamboo and wood. The houses are affordable and easy to set up as it takes only four hours to erect and dismantle them.

Mr. Shetty is seeking government subsidies to bring the price down further for those who cannot afford the units.

“Mr. Shetty epitomises a growing breed of young leaders and entrepreneurs in India who are committed to finding solutions for a country undergoing rapid social and economic changes, some of which can leave India’s poorest straggling behind,” Time said.

“In my travels I saw vast stretches of rural India where infrastructure for health care and education was severely underdeveloped,” he says in the Time report.

“Building facilities in these areas is not impossible but it is time-consuming. Adaptive architecture...can be an extremely effective solution to help address our developmental problems,” he said, adding that “often the simplest solutions are the best solutions.”

The list also includes Israeli social entrepreneur Adi Altschuler (27), China’s Zhao Bowen (22), who is working on improving medical testing and activist Ikram Ben Said (34), who founded ‘Aswat Nissa’ in Tunisia that is dedicated to women’s rights and the first to involve Tunisian women politicians.

Online music video mogul Jamal Edwards (24) is building an online music video empire and giving other entrepreneurs a helping hand while Ola Orekunrin (28) is the founder and managing director of Flying Doctors Nigeria, the first emergency air ambulance service in the country.

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