Classroom lesson · Grand Mosque of Bobo-Dioulasso · 🇧🇫 Burkina Faso

Grand Mosque of Bobo-Dioulasso

A beautiful building made entirely from mud and wood

The mud-brick Grand Mosque of Bobo-Dioulasso with wooden poles sticking out of its walls

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The Grand Mosque of Bobo-Dioulasso is one of the most famous buildings in all of West Africa. It is built almost entirely from sun-dried mud bricks, and wooden poles stick out of the walls all the way up. The building has stood in the heart of the city since the 1880s.

Tell me more

Building with mud bricks is one of the oldest construction techniques in the world. The bricks are shaped from clay, mixed with straw to make them stronger, and dried in the hot sun. When finished, the walls are covered in a smooth layer of mud plaster, giving them their beautiful curved, rounded look.

The wooden poles you can see poking out of the walls are not just decoration - they are a clever part of the design. Because mud expands and cracks slightly every rainy season, the poles act like a built-in ladder. Each year, local craftspeople use them to climb up and repair the outside layer of plaster, keeping the building looking as good as new.

The building has two towers on either side of the front entrance, and smaller cone-shaped spires run along the top. This style of architecture - tall, pointy mud towers decorated with wooden poles - is found across West Africa and is called Sudano-Sahelian architecture. It is recognised by the United Nations as a unique and important building tradition.

The Grand Mosque sits in the Kibidoué quarter, the oldest part of Bobo-Dioulasso. Around it is a lively neighbourhood of narrow lanes, market stalls and old houses built in a similar style. Many visitors say that stepping into this part of the city feels like stepping back in time to a different century.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why do you think builders in West Africa used mud and wood instead of stone or concrete? What materials are most buildings near your school made from?
  2. 02The poles in the walls work as a built-in maintenance tool. Can you think of other clever design features you have noticed in buildings?
  3. 03The mosque needs to be repaired every year after the rainy season. What does that tell you about how communities look after important buildings together?
Try this

Classroom activity

Using air-dry clay or salt dough, build a small mud-brick wall. Press pencils or lolly sticks into the surface before it dries to copy the wooden-pole design of the mosque. Once dry, sketch your wall and label the bricks and the poles.