Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Build Overview

Content taken from HfH Website

Chimaltenango, Guatemala - October 10 - 20, 2010

This Global Village trip is a chance to experience local culture in Guatemala, helping families’ dreams of a decent and affordable home come true. Discover the country’s culture and life while you help build simple, decent homes for the community in Chimaltenango.

No previous construction skills or experience are required-just a desire to learn, be flexible, share tasks and enjoy making friends and acquaintances from different cultures as well as your own. This 11 day build will be an excellent and a life changing experience.

Chimaltenango Overview

Content taken from HfH Website 

Our build will take place in Chimaltenango. Chimaltenango refers to the period the Spanish first arrived in this region of Guatemala. The Spaniards found the main square fortified by shields. Chimali- refers to shield and tenango- means place of. The department called Chimaltenango was officially founded in 1839.

Chimaltenango is in the western highlands and is about an hour from Guatemala City. The terrain varies between valleys, mountains, and ravines. The area has 446, 133 inhabitants. About 42% live in urban areas and 79% have access to running water. It is 13th of 22 departments (Regions in Guatemala) in terms of salary levels. Chimaltenango has a 36% illiteracy rate. The temperature ranges from a low of 16C to a high of 24C during the day and falls considerably in the evening.

Habitat for Humanity was established in Chimaltenango in 2003. As of March 2009 it has constructed 570 homes. The partner families are mostly farmers. Often the entire family works in a rented field nearby. They grow mostly corn and beans. In addition they will grow other crops to sell at a market or to a middleman who comes through the community.

The typical home in the area is constructed of dried corn stalks with wooden floors. They will build a number of these structures that together form a housing complex (bedrooms, kitchen).

The Habitat house we’ll be assisting our partner family build will be a simple, decent home with 2 to 4 bedrooms, averaging about 45 square meters in size. These homes are constructed from concrete blocks, rebar, dug foundation, concrete floor and corrugated tin roof.

HfH Guatemala Overview

Content taken from the HfH Website

The first Habitat houses in all of Latin America and Caribbean went up in Guatemala in 1979, specifically in Aguacatan, Huehuetenango.

HFH Guatemala was created with the purpose of improving the living conditions of low-income Guatemalan families through the construction of decent low-cost houses. The organization’s vision is that everyone in Guatemala should have access to a decent house.

Structured as a community organization that includes the participation of more than 1,300 volunteers, HFH specializes in working with those families that have no access to the national financing system (banks, cooperatives, etc.) and who are living in sub-human conditions.

An average 3,000 Habitat homes are constructed each year in 15 departments; 70 percent of these houses are in rural zones and 30 percent in urban areas.

Depending on the future homeowner’s payment capacity, the house may measure from 32m2 to 51 m2. The loan for the cost of the house is granted for an 8-year term, through monthly installments of US$21, which represents a third or a fourth of the cost of renting a single room.

Houses are built with the following materials: cement blocks, iron, tin roof sheets, metal doors, four windows and wood. All these materials are easily found in the communities. The design is anti-seismic, making the constructions safer for families.

HOUSING NEEDS

In Guatemala, there is a need for 1.6 million houses. Currently, families live in huts or crowded in a small rented room. The great problem is land tenure; since many invade property belonging to the state or to individuals, most poor families are not the legitimate owners of the land they inhabit. These properties do not have basic utilities and are located in high-risk areas, mostly in urban zones. Also, there is a high degree of delinquency and crime.

Due to the conditions in which they live, there is a high risk of maternal and infant death due to gastrointestinal, respiratory and skin diseases.

Other hindrances that poor families wanting to build a decent house face are: lack of legal documents or property deeds; loans at an interest rate ranging between 18 to 30 percent; lands located in ravines, river banks, etc.; and land at prices unaffordable for the poor.

Due to their income level and to the type of guarantee they offer, many families claim that without HFH, they would not have been able to build their homes. By the end of 2005, HFH Guatemala hopes to be present throughout the entire country and celebrate the construction of house number 25,000; by the end of 2008, the hope is to hand over the keys of house number 40,000.

COUNTRY FACTS

  • Location: Central America
  • Climate: tropical
  • Population: 12,640,000
  • Economy: primary exports include coffee, sugar, bananas, corn, cardamom
  • Government: republic
  • Religion: predominantly Christian
  • Literacy: 55 percent
  • Language: Spanish, Mayan languages

Affiliates in Guatemala

  1. Central, HPH Chimaltenango
  2. El Progreso HPH Guastatoya, El Progreso
  3. Barcenas HPH Miami
  4. San Lucas Toliman HPH Miami
  5. San Marcos HPH Miami
  6. Totonicapan HPH Miami
  7. El Rosario HPH Miami
  8. Xela Occidente HPH Miami
  9. Norte Habitat p/l Humanidad Miami
  10. Tikal Peten, HPH Peten
  11. Sur Oriente HPH Quetzaltenango
  12. Izabal HPH Quetzaltenango
  13. El Quiche, HPH Quetzaltenango
  14. Suchitepequez HPH Quetzaltenango
  15. Escuintla HPH Quetzaltenango
  16. Nororiente HPH Zacapa