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Kenyan Eco-Village Being Built by Slum-Dwellers
Around the world, many initiatives are striving to balance the needs of humans and the environment. Ambitious projects to build eco-cities have so far had mixed results. In Shanghai, China a joint project with a British company has run into difficulties. Here is a story of how slum-dwellers in Kenya are building an eco-town from scratch. And maybe pioneering a model that can be tried in other places too.
A Kenyan eco-village is helping slum dwellers to start new lives and increase their wealth. The community, Kaputei, is being built by former slum residents – some of whom used to beg to survive – and is providing new homes with electricity, running water and services like schools and parks. By building their own homes, with the help of affordable mortgage loans, the residents are able to make a big upgrade to their quality of life while acquiring real wealth.
More than 900 million people – almost a sixth of the world’s population – now live in urban slums (UN). This number will double by 2030 as a result of rapid urbanization in developing countries. Already in developing countries 43 per cent of urban dwellers live in slums, and the figure leaps to 78 per cent in the least-developed countries. The UN estimates it will take US $18 billion a year to improve living conditions for these people – and most of it will have to come from the residents themselves.
Kaputei is a project of Kenya’s largest and oldest micro-finance lender, Jamii Bora (www.jamiibora.org). Having enjoyed significant success in making loans to over 225,000 people – after starting out in 1999 with loans to just 50 beggars – it realized something on a larger scale was necessary to permanently transform the lives of poor Kenyans.
Jamii Bora’s founder, Ingrid Munro, saw the whole atmosphere of the slums as the biggest impediment to long-term life changes. “As long as you are living in the slums, you will never climb out of poverty,” she told The Independent newspaper. “Families of course need economic opportunities to rise out of poverty, but what good are they if you are still living in hell?”
Jamii Bora came up with the idea of building an entire community from scratch, and doing it in way that was affordable, ecological and sustainable, while building the wealth of the residents. Since 2007, the project has provided homes for 50 families; the target is to have homes for 2,000.
One former beggar who has built her own home is Clarice Adhiambo. An early client of Jamii Bora, she started to learn how to save, reaching her first goal of saving 1,000 Kenyan shillings (US $12.81). With Jamii Bora’s encouragement, she plowed this money back into buying some fish and selling it in the markets. Over time, she was able to grow her efforts until she was a regular market trader, and was borrowing as much as US $1,900 to fund various slum businesses.
Then came the Kaputei project. It has helped Adhiambo move from a 3 meter by 3 meter tin shack in the Nairobi slum of Soweto to her own home with running water: “So much water,” she told The Independent.
The new home is 50 square metres with two bedrooms, a sitting room and a bathroom.
Adhiambo pays US $36 a month for her mortgage — more than most people, because she wants to pay it off quickly. That compares to about US $20 a month in rent paid by many slum dwellers to live in squalor with poor services and quality of life.
Kaputei is a clever community project. Unlike attempts to build housing for the poor in isolation, Kaputei is based on neighbourhoods of 250 families each, with common community centres, playgrounds, parks and church halls. There is a town centre, and zones for commercial and industrial enterprises. The project was approved by the Kenyan government in 2004 and has planning permission for 119 hectares. Trees are being planted to provide protection from wind, add beauty, and, in time, to be a source of income or firewood. A wetland is being used to recycle waste water and is being run in partnership with Kenyan universities.
Each house costs US $1,875 to build. The homes are so cheap because the building materials are assembled in a factory on site, and the families help with the building.
Three house models are available and the families – from the Kamba, Kikuyu, Luo and Maasai peoples – choose the one they like by viewing show homes on site. Each home has access to roads, water and sewage.
It’s estimated the entire community of 2,000 families will cost US $3,750,000 for the homes, and another US $3,750,000 for infrastructure. Mortgages are offered at between 8.5 percent and 10 percent interest and are estimated to take 10 to 15 years to repay. The average mortgage is about US $32 a month.
Resources
Source: Development Challenges, South-South Solutions
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at 03:55 on June 22nd, 2009
Very appealing story, though i'm troubled by some premises stated. I am sure that not all slum dwellers are beggars, many of them also very competitive vendors and workers and they are integrated to the whole city's economic structure, both formal and informal. Can they survive in the new village with isolation from other city groups? Such a case like this also eventually confirms that Nairobi is restricted to the urban poor. The US gave us enough example of tha failure of single social class sprawls.
at 04:06 on June 22nd, 2009
Very appealing story, though i'm troubled by some premises stated. I am sure that not all slum dwellers are beggars, many of them also very competitive vendors and workers and they are integrated to the whole city's economic structure, both formal and informal. Can they survive in the new village with isolation from other city groups? Such a case like this also eventually confirms that Nairobi is restricted to the urban poor. The US gave us enough example of the failure of single social class sprawls.
at 02:21 on June 29th, 2009
give me your phisical address here in Nairobi because i need to come to the offices to get more information
at 02:33 on July 2nd, 2009
Nature Alliance is a private non-profit forum with safe environment savvy people. We are campaigning for sustainable development, sustainable consumption, waste management and saving & planting trees.
Recently, we have taken up a project to make Eco-village. The place is about 95 km from the capital Dhaka. It's name is Shamalia having a population of about 1500 people, mostly farmers. Though the land is very good, opportunities are not harvested for multiple crops because of shortage of water. Agaian, this village is in the lap of a once known deep forest. Trees have been felled to supply firewood for cooking. Nature Alliance has taken the initiative to save the forest by motivating the villagers to make and use biogas. In order to produce biogas, Nature Alliance has arranged financial and technical support to develop as many poultry farms, the droppings from which could be used to make biogas. The biogas is then piped to the kitchen to ignite the stoves. This is saving trees.
Our next effort is arranging solar panels in each homestead. This will help the villagers to have a better lifestyle and for those in small enterprises, make longer business. It will also help lessen health hazards because not much kerosene will be burnt.