Project Status



Project Type:  Sand Dam

Regional Program: Southeastern Kenya WaSH Program

Project Phase:  Raising Funds
Estimated Install Date (?):  2024

Project Features


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This project is partially funded by an Accelerator Grant

The 240 people of Kalinza struggle to access sufficient water daily because their only water source is far away and requires a long, tiresome trip. Although there is a kiosk where they can collect water from a well that provides clean water, community members must walk two hours to get to the location.

"Personally, water is all I think of, and it's all that stresses me from time to time. I have no donkey, so I depend on borrowing people's donkeys to go and fetch water. At times when everyone is busy with their donkey, I have to carry water using my back, which is subjected to much unworthy suffering," said 40-year-old farmer Josephine Kasumo, shown below.

But the distance is not the only problem. After community members expend so much energy getting to the well, they find long queues of people also waiting to collect water, causing them distress as they watch the day waste away. They must collect water, but the draining task leaves them with little energy or time to do anything else, interrupting even their tasks like cooking and farming.

"I feel so bad about fetching water at the water source. My school time is mostly affected as I am forced to make time for water rather than studies or even my homework," said 15-year-old Agnes M. (seen below).

Installing a sand dam will enable people like Josephine and young people like Agnes to focus on quickly collecting sufficient, safe water to meet their needs while still having the time and energy to complete their daily tasks and potentially make progress that enriches their lives.

Having a sand dam in their area will help community members access clean drinking water near their homes and give them time to engage in other life-giving activities like farming, income generation, improving community hygiene and sanitation levels, and educating the community's children.

Helping to solve the water crisis in this community will take a multi-faceted system. It requires the collaboration of the sand dam and a dug well. They will work together to create a sustainable water source that will serve this community for years to come.

The Proposed Solution, Determined Together...

At The Water Project, everyone has a part in conversations and solutions. We operate in transparency, believing it benefits everyone. We expect reliability from one another as well as our water solutions. Everyone involved makes this possible through hard work and dedication.

In a joint discovery process, community members determine their most advantageous water solution alongside our technical experts. Read more specifics about this solution on the What We're Building tab of this project page. Then, community members lend their support by collecting needed construction materials (sometimes for months ahead of time!), providing labor alongside our artisans, sheltering and feeding the builders, and supplying additional resources.

Water Access for Everyone

This water project is one piece in a large puzzle. In Kenya, Sierra Leone, and Uganda, we're working toward complete coverage of reliable, maintained water sources that guarantee public access now and in the future within a 30-minute round trip for each community, household, school, and health center. One day, we hope to report that this has been achieved!

Training on Health, Hygiene & More

With the community's input, we've identified topics where training will increase positive health outcomes at personal, household, and community levels. We'll coordinate with them to find the best training date. Some examples of what we train communities on are:

  • Improved hygiene, health, and sanitation habits
  • Safe water handling, storage & treatment
  • Disease prevention and proper handwashing
  • Income-generation
  • Community leadership, governance, & election of a water committee
  • Operation and maintenance of the water point

We're just getting started, check back soon!


Project Photos


Project Type

Sand dams are huge, impressive structures built into the riverbeds of seasonal rivers (rivers that disappear every year during dry seasons). Instead of holding back a reservoir of water like a traditional dam would, sand dams accumulate a reservoir of silt and sand. Once the rain comes, the sand will capture 1-3% of the river’s flow, allowing most of the water to pass over. Then, we construct shallow wells on the riverbank to provide water even when the river has dried up, thanks to new groundwater reserves. Learn more here!


Contributors

Accelerator Match