There is urgency to the back-breaking work. Nepal was crippled by last month's magnitude-7.8 earthquake, which killed more than 8,000, while a string of strong aftershocks has further terrified the survivors.
The capital of Kathmandu is in shambles. Entire villages are flattened into rubble and dust. And many businesses have shut down, leaving survivors scrambling for income.
The brick factories clustered in Bhaktapur, a town on the outskirts of Kathmandu, are some of the few businesses still running. For the owners and workers who have not fled back to their villages, that means there is still a chance of earning daily wages and profits.
"There has been so much destruction," she said. "Every brick is going to help bring the country and people back on their feet."
Though many of the factories have also been damaged, with kiln towers toppled and workers' housing destroyed, those who remain are laboring overtime before the anticipated rush for construction materials. In a few weeks, monsoon will arrive and create impassable mud swamps, trigger landslides and pummel the tarpaulin tents providing shelter to many across the country.
He expects the price of bricks to go up, from a pre-quake level of about 17 US cents to as much as 25 cents. But he insists he will not profit from the tragedy by raising his prices.
"We have faced a big loss in the earthquake, we are also victims," he said. "We hope the government will bring programs that could help businesses like ours."
Nepal faces billions in reconstruction costs, and has appealed for foreign governments and agencies for help. Almost 745,600 buildings and homes have been damaged or destroyed, including at least 87,700 in the capital, according to Nepal's emergency authority. Engineers say only 40 per cent of Kathmandu's damaged buildings as habitable.
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