
The project management team for the École Lakay project has been meeting diligently the past two months via conference call and face-to-face meetings wherever possible.
Through their communications with the school owners and management - the Rinaldi Foundation and the Salesian Order/ Mission - it has been determined that following a needs assessment (functional plan), the school now must service a population of some 150 students. Previously, the school held only 80 students.
A new design calls for a 2,200 square metre complex with concrete clock on the first floor and a steel frame on the second. The structure consists of an L-shaped building (i.e. building A) and a smaller square building joined via a roof that fits inside the L-shape (i.e. building B).
As one can imagine, the increased size of the project has raised the cost to approximately $1.3 million. Thanks to continuing donations, an additional $130,000 dollars has already been pledged, and another $100,000 is expected. Further fundraising efforts are underway in order to ensure that the school is built to the satisfaction of the Canadian construction industry.
Although the scope of the project has increased, the project management team is confident in its design, and its functional plan. The geo-tech report has been completed and reviewed, and during the upcoming mission to Haiti, the task force will meet with possible contractors and begin the selection process of site supervisors.
Further updates and pictures will be available following the upcoming mission, which is taking place the week of September 18, 2011.
On January 12, 2010, a catastrophic magnitude 7.0 earthquake hit Haiti. Centered less than 25 kilometers from its capital, Port-au-Prince, it left as many as 250,000 people dead and more than 300,000 injured. The earthquake damaged more than 250,000 residences and 30,000 commercial buildings.
École Lakay, a trade school located near Port-au-Prince, was seriously damaged. The École Lakay Project saw Canadian Construction Association (CCA) work together with the Association de la construction du Québec, British Columbia Construction Association, Builders without Borders, as well as The Rinaldi Foundation in Haiti to raise funds to rebuild the school whose graduates, through learning construction trades, will be in prime position to help rebuild their home country.
The original fundraising goal of $500,000 to rebuild École Lakay was reached during CCA’s Annual Conference in Hawaii. In a touching demonstration of generosity over $300,000 was raised during the Closing Gala, bringing the total funds raised by CCA and its École Lakay Project partners to over $600,000. CCA’s Chair Dee Miller expressed her appreciation for the donations that came in from all over Canada. “Our members’ generosity is heart-warming,” she said. “Many of our members have held fundraisers and donated to this very worthy cause.”
The project is now moving on to the next phase. A project team is being assembled and is expected to travel to Haiti in mid-May. We will keep you updated on the École Lakay Project’s progress.
