Each year, hundreds of thousands and sometimes millions of people the world over are affected by disasters that leave them without adequate shelter. Due to economic, space and transportation concerns, the solution most often employed to solve this housing crisis has been to hand out blue plastic tarps
and tents. Though cheap and easy to store and transport, most relief workers agree that the blue plastic tarps
and tents are nothing more than an extremely short-term solution.
The IADDIC DR1 solves the need for a better solution to the temporary to semi-temporary housing needs of “houseless” disaster victims with a dwelling that is both a better shelter and one that lasts longer.
Semi Rigid Shelter with Felt
Cover
A
crucial component of disaster recovery is the relief
of the shelter problem. Our disaster relief shelter
units are lightweight, compact, durable – and
inexpensive. These structures are at the leading
edge of portable shelter technology today and offer
prefabricated building type shelters at tent shelter
type costs. This is the next generation of emergency
housing.
The IADDIC semi-rigid shelter can be
configured with integrated wiring and lighting as well as
plumbing.
This shelter anchors to the ground with a
nine point system that can be secured to a number of
foundation types including dirt, wood and concrete. The
mounting system is enclosed within the dwelling to prevent
theft (and tampering with the shelter) from the outside.
The IADDIC DR1 is an affordable, lightweight, mid-term shelter that is conveniently packaged for ease of transport. It provides features not found together in any other solution. These features include:
A completely assembled shelter “in a bag” that requires only minor finishing and anchoring – tasks that can be performed by people everywhere. A foil-backed exterior shell which completely isolates the shelters inhabitants from the elements. A two inch-thick insulated wall system that offers the highest levels of insulation available in any shelter system. A shelter that will not rot. A shelter that will not mold. A shelter that can be made flame resistant. A shelter that is mass producible. A shelter that is constructed with a contiguous wall and roof design which means there are fewer seams to come apart. A shelter that has an integral support system which provide load baring capabilities which are not available with tents. A shelter which is impervious to most chemicals including fuels used for cooking and lighting. A shelter which is resistant to insects.
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Hamas: Direct talks will lead to more Palestinian suffering
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Updated every day
HOW TO: Source and deliver the right food to 300,000 IDPs in northern Yemen
SANAA, 29 July 2010 (IRIN) - Feeding over 300,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) in northern Yemen involves complex logistics and coordination. PAKISTAN: Timeline on human displacement since September 2009
LAHORE, 29 July 2010 (IRIN) - Conflict-related population displacements have been continuing in northwestern Pakistan as the government tries to take the fight to pro-Taliban rebels - highlights below. BANGLADESH: Spreading the floating farms’ tradition
CHANDRA, 29 July 2010 (IRIN) - As swollen monsoon rivers and rising sea levels threaten to engulf more land across Bangladesh, NGOs are training thousands of farmers in traditional soil-less farming on water. GUINEA: Climbing out of the donor funding gap
DAKAR, 28 July 2010 (IRIN) - More than two million Guineans do not have enough to eat, basic health services are a shambles and the country is in a fragile transition from decades of military rule, yet most aid donors do not see Guinea as an "emergency". AFRICA: It's how you spend the money that saves lives
KAMPALA/JOHANNESBURG, 28 July 2010 (IRIN) - Members of the African Union (AU) reaffirmed at the end of their meeting on 27 July in Kampala, Uganda, that they would strive to spend 15 percent of their national budgets on health, but at the end of the day it is about how "effectively and efficiently" you spend the money, not about how much. MADAGASCAR: Going the way of the dodo?
JOHANNESBURG, 28 July 2010 (IRIN) - Vast portions of Madagascar's unique biodiversity could be lost - possibly forever, and at incalculable cost to ordinary Malagasy and the world - by the continued suspension of environmental funding in response to an ongoing political crisis, says a new report by the US Agency for International Development (USAID), the main environmental donor. Analysis: Time for jaw-jaw, not war-war in Somaliland
HARGEISA, 28 July 2010 (IRIN) - Negotiating a swift end to a conflict in the east that has displaced thousands of civilians in recent weeks should be a top priority for Somaliland's new president if a much larger crisis is to be averted, say analysts. AFRICA: Mapping health budgets and child deaths
JOHANNESBURG, 28 July 2010 (IRIN) - As many African countries battle to bring down staggering rates of maternal and child mortality, maternal and child health made for a fitting theme at the African Union (AU) Summit this week in Kampala, Uganda. OPT: West Bank Bedouins worse off than Gazans
AL HADIDIYA, WEST BANK, 28 July 2010 (IRIN) - The road to al-Hadidiya village in the northeastern West Bank district of Tubas is dotted with boulders etched with a warning in Hebrew, Arabic and English: “Danger - Open Fire Area”. AFGHANISTAN: Flash floods leave over 20 dead
KABUL, 28 July 2010 (IRIN) - Flash floods killed over 20 people and destroyed dozens of houses in different parts of Afghanistan on 26-27 July, according to the Afghanistan National Disasters Management Authority (ANDMA). GLOBAL: "Seek, test, treat and retain" to stem HIV among drug users
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SANAA, 28 July 2010 (IRIN) - There is growing concern that another round of fighting between the army and Houthi-led rebels in the northern governorates of Saada and Amran is imminent. Clashes have escalated in recent days and an 11 February ceasefire has all but broken down, observers say. In Brief: Dengue cases spike in Thailand
BANGKOK, 28 July 2010 (IRIN) - Dengue has reached a five-year high in Thailand, with 41,136 cases and 38 deaths to 20 July, against 22,969 infections and 19 deaths in the same period last year, according to the Ministry of Public Health. SOUTH AFRICA: Child deaths stubbornly high
JOHANNESBURG, 27 July 2010 (IRIN) - The race to meet the Millennium Development Goals (MDG) by 2015 is more than halfway run, but new reports say South Africa is unlikely to reduce its burden of deaths in children under five in time to cross the finish line. GLOBAL: Insights into the ever more complex aid system
DAKAR, 27 July 2010 (IRIN) - As the humanitarian “system” becomes more complex, with new actors and overlapping mandates, different definitions of humanitarian aid, and ever-more ambitious goals, humanitarian aid watchdog Development Initiatives outlines some of the needs, responses and funding trends over the past decade in its 2010 Global Humanitarian Assistance (GHA) report.