14.07.2010
Hames Sharley Opens New Office in Darwin
08.03.2010
David Cooke: Adelaide Should Consider Bike Roads
18.02.2010
Hames Sharley Wins "CleverGreen Innovators to Watch Awards"
22.12.2009
The Forgotten TOD
22.12.2009
Hames Sharley Awarded Morley Master Plan
10.12.2009
Hames Sharley Backing Next Generation Architects
10.12.2009
Hames Sharley Wins UTAS 'Steps Co-location Research Facility'
07.12.2009
Finalist in Clever Green Innovators to Watch Award
28.07.2009
Have we the balls to improve the Mall?
13.07.2009
Hames Sharley Powers On
23.06.2009
Network 7 Receives the First Judge’s Commendation at the Property Council Awards.
18.06.2009
Hames Sharley Designs South Australia’s first 4 Greenstar Refurbished Building.
06.05.2009
Rebecca's Mission to Help in Africa
27.02.2009
Hames Sharley Receives Award for Sustainable Design
10.02.2009
Order of Australia for Hames Sharley Director Warren Kerr
09.02.2009
Hames Sharley Supports Rebecca’s Volunteer Work in Kenya
15.01.2009
Hames Sharley Dubbed as one of Adelaide’s “Fast Movers.”
01.12.2008
Hames Sharley, Fitting into the Dream
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by Rebecca Walsh
My whirlwind African building experience began with another
My time in
Soon after we got to site and shooed the cows off, we discovered that the site measurements were wrong. Our first job then was to re-measure the site and to re-organise the buildings since the factory was still in its design stage and it was going to be too early to do start any building work for this project. As disappointed as I was that I wasn’t going to get my hands dirty, I realized that this project was going to benefit immensely from having volunteers with building skills and knowledge on site at this early stage. We spent most of our time in Kiminini talking to local builders, looking up hardware stores and discovering what kind of building materials were available in neighboring towns and then we altered the design to suit. It was just like at home in the office.
With the rainy season approaching and no building work on the factory, I decided to put together a project to build mosquito screens for the classrooms and dorm rooms to protect the kids from malaria. I had sketched, 130m of timber, 240 screws 60 hinges and a team of carpenters (Juma and Moses) and a hand drill. I’m not going to say it was hard work, but Kenyan building materials make the work trying. Concrete render fails and chips away from the wall and clay bricks crumble in our hands. However, by the time I left Kiminini, we had built and put up 2 screens.
My second two weeks were spent in a Masai village in the South of the country, about an hour away from
Emanuel and his wife Lillian were great hosts, they had no power and no running water and they cooked chapatti for dinner by candle light. On the last day on site, Emanuel took myself and two other volunteers on Safari through Masai Mara. Masai Mara is named
Many of the schools in
None of these projects I was involved in or the many others through