A community-built gravity-fed irrigation and drinking water system serving 62 farming households who currently walk 3+ hours daily for clean water — eliminating a $40K/year hidden economic burden and enabling a second growing season.
Hvorfor dette projekt findes, hvem det tjener, og hvad succes betyder.
62 farming households in Solano Valley have no reliable access to clean water within their community.
The nearest safe source is a natural spring 4.2 km uphill — a 3-hour round trip on foot, made daily by women and children.
Crops fail in the dry months because irrigation depends entirely on rainfall.
In wet months, waterborne illness is common because families store water in open containers for days.
The hidden cost: an estimated $650 per household per year in lost labor, medical expenses, and reduced harvest.
62 smallholder farming households (approx. 310 people) in Barangay Solano, majority women-led; water-fetching falls entirely on women and girls ages 10–55.
Berørte mennesker: 310
The barangay council recently completed a topographic survey confirming the spring elevation (87m above the village) is sufficient for a gravity-fed system — no pumping required, making this affordable and maintenance-light.
Three households have already pledged labor.
The dry season begins in 6 weeks: if pipe installation starts now, the first harvest with irrigation water can happen in cycle 2.
Klar allokering, milepæle og live finansieringsfremskridt.
Dette projekt finansieres som et komplet system:
Hver dollar allokeres, så projektet kan leveres, er tilgængeligt og kan verificeres.
Dette omfatter implementering, projektstøtte og gennemsigtig leveringssporing. Afsnittet nedenfor viser, hvordan den fulde projektomkostning allokeres ved indsamlingsmålet.
Ved fuld finansiering er hver andel nedenfor en procentdel af projektets samlede indsamlingsmål.
Disse milepæle viser, hvordan finansiering omsættes til udførelse over tid.
Spring intake & holding tank complete
Main line & distribution network installed
System flush, handover & cooperative launch
Følg fremskridt mod projektets fulde finansieringsmål.
Solano Barangay Water Committee Chair
Civil works & pipe installation lead
Community mobilization & documentation
Municipal water engineer (volunteer)
Waiting another year means another season of failed crops and $40K in community-wide economic loss.
A 4.2 km gravity-fed main line from the uphill spring, branching into a 1.1 km distribution network with 8 communal taps and 3 agricultural offtakes.
Includes a 5,000-liter concrete holding tank at the spring head, sediment filters at each tap cluster, and a simple metering system so the community can track usage and collect a small monthly maintenance contribution.
A fully operational gravity-fed water system owned and maintained by the Solano Farmers Water Cooperative (newly formed).
Eight communal taps within 200m of every household.
Three agricultural offtakes enabling dry-season irrigation across 14 hectares.
A trained 4-person maintenance committee with tools, spare parts, and a maintenance fund seeded by the first 6 months of community contributions.
Written operations manual in Filipino and Cebuano.
14 weeks total: spring intake and tank construction (weeks 1–4), main line trenching and pipe lay (weeks 5–9), distribution network and tap installation (weeks 10–12), system flush, pressure test, and community handover (weeks 13–14).
All 8 taps delivering clean water on a set daily schedule; zero households reporting daily water-fetching trips off-site; at least 10 hectares planted in the dry season for the first time; maintenance committee collecting monthly contributions and logging usage; no major leaks or pressure failures in the first 90 days.
Women and children no longer seen on the mountain trail with water jugs in the early morning.
Green dry-season crops visible on plots that were bare earth last year.
Communal tap points with a small shelter and handwashing station at each cluster.
The spring intake structure — a small concrete headworks — visible at the top of the line as proof of the source.
A simple usage board at the central tap updated weekly by the maintenance committee.