Post-Tsunami Housing Reconstruction, Kalutara District, Sri Lanka - Final Report & Lessons Learnt

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Author(s)
Ryan Collins, L.
Publication language
English
Pages
68pp
Date published
01 Jun 2009
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Tsunamis, Response and recovery, Shelter and housing
Countries
Sri Lanka
Organisations
Belgian Red Cross Society

 The tsunami that struck Sri Lanka on 26th  December 2004 caused the loss of over 35,000 lives and the destruction of over 65,000 houses, as well as social upheaval and psychological trauma for the survivors. Between March 2005 and May 2009, Belgian Red Cross –French speaking community (CRB) implemented a housing reconstruction project in the District of Kalutara, on the South-West coast of Sri Lanka. With co-funding from the Luxemburg Red Cross and the Rode Kruis Vlaanderen, CRB funded the construction of four-hundred and ninety-six high quality houses, including ten resettlement sites on land donated by the government. In the resettlement sites, infrastructure such as roads and drains, and community facilities such as community centres and children’s play parks were also constructed. Drinking water infrastructure was also provided where necessary.

Alongside the construction programme, CRB ran a community programme in the resettlement sites. The programme supported the new communities in building up the organisations, relationships, and knowledge necessary to act collectively to make the settlement sustainable, both physically and socially. As part of the community programme, CRB also promoted land rights for housing beneficiaries on state land, and advocated within the Red Cross Movement for similar programmes to be run on a wider scale.

CRB constructed almost all housing under an ‘owner-driven’ approach, in which beneficiaries were given cash grants and managed the reconstruction themselves with CRB’s supervision and support. Using this system, CRB was able to start reconstruction before other Partner National Societies (PNSs). The owner-driven approach also made beneficiaries the central actors in their recovery, which helped them to realise their strengths, and focus achievable goals while rebuilding their lives.