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Wired Covers the Hexayurt
02.19.2010
01:59 am
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Wired picked up on the Hexayurt—a $100 stable housing solution that can help put Haiti back on the rails far quicker than disposable disaster tents. (Hexayurts previously covered at Dangerous Minds here.)

With just $100 worth of plywood and screws, almost anyone can build a shelter known as a Hexayurt that can last three years and possibly even withstand a hurricane. The simple DIY structure could be a critical temporary solution for some of the estimated 1 million or more people left homeless in quake-torn Haiti.

Aid agencies have distributed around 10,000 tents to Haiti so far, according to to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), one of the dozens of charity groups in Haiti focused on emergency shelter. But 200,000 are needed, and even then, the tents won’t stand up to the weather.

“Tents are a three to five month option in the midst of the dry season,” said Vincent Houver, IOM Chief of Mission in Haiti, in a recent press release. “But emergency and transitional shelter solutions sufficiently durable to last at least two years need to be found before the heavy rains arrive in a few months.”

Tents do have the benefit of a supply chain already in place that makes it easy to ramp up production when disaster strikes, and they can be transported to remote sites and set up relatively quickly. But they run around $300 to $400 and only last about a year, in good weather.

(Find out how you can help here.)

(Wired: Hexayurts for Haiti)

(And at the UN Dispatch, here.)

Posted by Jason Louv
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02.19.2010
01:59 am
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