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Summaries
of HUNGER PROJECTS in Africa
Working with LWR Partners
Mali—Consolidation of Woodless Construction Technique
Partners: LWR and the Development Workshop Mali (DWM)
Mali
is located in the semi-arid region of Africa, immediately south of the
Sahara Desert.
Drought
and over-consumption of wood and organic materials
over the past twenty years has led to a depletion of local wood supply
also leading to soil erosion and progressive desertification. Fuel
wood is the
single cause for concern, but wood for building is unquestionably the
second. Most houses in poor communities are small round mud-huts
with grass roofs
or earth block houses with flat wooden roof. The woodless construction
technique introduced in the Sahel in the 1980’s, eliminates the need
for wood for flat roofs by using earth, an abundant building material
to construct
vault or dome roofs. Local masons will build the walls and the roofs
from ordinary mud bricks formed in simple rectangular moulds, smoothed
by hand
and dried in the open. While the wide adoption of this technique will
ensure better balance between human settlement needs and natural
resource management
through reduced dependence on rapidly disappearing trees, it will also
allow the local masons and masons organizations to improve their
livelihoods.
GOAL: To gain financial and organizational autonomy by improving its capacity
to design and implement project activities and an aggressive marketing strategy.
DWM will facilitate the establishment of masons organizations and their eventual
autonomy through continued training of local masons in improved construction
techniques and construction business management skills. The project is also
expected to increase local demand for building using the technique.
LWR’s accompaniment strategy will include addressing DWM organizational
gaps, facilitating networking with other local and international NGOs
and ensuring that verifiable objectives and indicators are set following
a baseline
study.
OBJECTIVES: LWR’s
partner, DWM will:
Improve organizational capacity of DWM.
The organization will also work towards attaining financial autonomy
and will be able to cover 40% of its operating costs at the end of
the project period.
Environmental conservation.
Aggressive marketing and awareness raising activities will lead to
increased local demand for buildings using the woodless construction
technique and 30% of constructions in villages will be using the technique by
end of
year 2.
Improve environmental conservation with the reduction in the demand
for construction wood.
Improve livelihood of masons.
Improve the capacity of 80 masons from trainings in new construction
techniques and business management skills, and through established
four masons organizations, they will be working towards autonomy and able to
cover 20%
of their operating costs. Masons association and members income and
livelihood will improve from increased demand for buildings using the woodless
construction
technique.
Approved Project Support: $124,880
Hunger
Projects : Burkina Faso, Ethiopia,
Kenya, Liberia, Niger,
Senegal, Sudan, Tanzania,
Togo and Uganda.
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