Architecture for Humanity

Designing Change

An Architecture for Humanity project site in Sri Lanka. Photo: <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/motherscratcher/1094620686/in/set-72157601375540506/">2neus (flickr)</a>
An Architecture for Humanity project site in Sri Lanka. Photo: 2neus (flickr)

Can architects, community leaders, students, and health care professionals all come together to design a better world for people in developing nations? That's exactly what the non-profit Architecture for Humanity is trying to do.

The group is comprised of over 4,500 volunteer design professionals and has chapters in 25 countries around the world. Volunteers design schools, community centers, soccer fields, homes and emergency shelters. About 10,000 people benefit directly from Architecture for Humanity projects each year.

In 2006 the organization created a community website that brings architects and other skilled professionals to collaborate on projects and share ideas for designing a better world, called the Open Architecture Network. The site boasts 15,000 registered users and 50,000 unique visits a month and is the first of its kind.

Open Architecture Network may best be known for their frequent competitions, which are open to anyone. This year's challenge is classroom design and is in response the World Bank's call for the construction of 10 million new classrooms to help meet the millennium development goal of achieving universal education by the year 2015.

Past competitions have taken on other socially responsible causes like constructing mobile health clinics designed to fight HIV/AIDS in remote areas and addressing the digital divide through designing sustainable, low-cost technology facilities for those who need them most. The winning team for the digital divide challenge in Africa designed a community center and technology hub for youth in Kenya's largest slum. The center houses a community radio station, a library, internet cafe and space for community events.


Stories We're Watching

As Growth Slows, India Awakens to Need for Foreign Investment

International Herald Tribune - Wed, 02/08/2012 - 08:26
India’s central bank and economic analysts predict that growth will fall sharply to 7 percent this fiscal year and remain sluggish.

Social responsibility and a new world order

Washington Post - Innovations - Tue, 02/07/2012 - 07:56
Just before the New Year, the London-based Center for Economics and Business Research announced that Brazil had overtaken the United Kingdom as the world’s sixth largest economy. Furthermore, it predicted that by 2020, India and Russia will also have overtaken all the European economic powers.

Aid for trade policy rears its ugly head

The Guardian's Poverty Matters - Mon, 02/06/2012 - 01:41
The UK government's dismay at not being granted the contract for Typhoon fighter jets in India is an indication that its controversial aid for trade policy is still very much alive.

Liberia's battle to put the lights back on

The Guardian's Poverty Matters - Sun, 02/05/2012 - 23:00
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has set ambitious targets to restore the country's electricity supply. But will it meet them by 2015?

As Africa's consumers rise, so does inequality

Yale Global Online - Fri, 02/03/2012 - 10:17
Kenya struggles to spread the wealth from rapid growth.

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