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Yuva Project to turn Türkiye’s Hatay into eco-friendly city

Yuva Project to turn Türkiye’s Hatay into eco-friendly city

In the aftermath of the Feb. 6 earthquakes that destroyed 11 provinces within the south, particularly Hatay, many volunteer teams proceed to work laborious to create everlasting shelter options, such because the Yuva Project, which goals to show Hatay into an eco-friendly and sustainable metropolis.

The challenge began with the efforts of volunteers and took on a brand new dimension after an architect named Gizem Cabaroğulları who survived the highly effective twin earthquakes joined the challenge.

“I am from Hatay’s Samandağ. I lost six of my relatives in the earthquake. My friends and I made use of all our local networks for this project. We found an old furniture workshop and started working there,” Cabaroğulları mentioned.

Speaking to each day native media, Cabaroğulları said that this nonprofit challenge additionally supplied employment alternatives to locals as all proceeds from the sale of the homes to numerous organizations within the earthquake zone are allotted for the salaries and insurance coverage funds of the staff.

“Currently, 16 of the 33-member team are women. We have produced 22 Yuva houses so far. Institutions such as the Autism Foundation and the Family and Social Services Ministry use them as classrooms, meeting spaces, kindergartens and psychological counseling centers,” she mentioned.

What makes these picket, eco-friendly Yuva homes totally different from tiny homes or common containers is that the challenge is predicated on a bigger and extra snug home mannequin, which additionally consists of particular options similar to storing rainwater for water conservation functions and utilizing “fire extinguisher balls” for a a lot stronger fireplace resistance than common picket homes.

Emphasizing that architects undertook a vital position through the reconstruction course of after the destruction of the entire metropolis, she famous that Hatay needs to be rebuilt as each an environmentally pleasant and disabled-friendly metropolis since hundreds of residents grew to become disabled after the catastrophe.

“There was a big problem of illegal construction in the city. It was full of unsound buildings, and we saw the results of that. An important problem in Hatay was that the city was built with buildings adjacent to each other. In the earthquake, the buildings collapsed by crashing into each other because there was no room. Many citizens in Hatay became disabled after the earthquake. Therefore, we should build new houses in the new city by taking all these details into consideration.”

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Source: www.dailysabah.com