Innovators and
Raise high the roofbeams: the diverse volunteers of Techo building housing for the poor.
CIVIC INNOVATOR
Un Techo
Para Mi País
Regional
September 2010 marks the bicentennial of Chile’s in- dependence from Spain (at he hands of the liberator Bernardo O’Higgins). If the
group Un Techo Para Mi País (A Roof
for My Country or Techo) achieves its
goal it will also mark the liberation
of millions of Chile’s poor from substandard living conditions. Created
over a decade ago by Jesuit priest Felipe Berríos, Techo has set the ambitious goal of eliminating all of the
substandard housing in Chile’s shantytowns by 2010.
The plan? To mobilize university
students throughout
Chile to work together
with residents of some
of the country’s worst
slums to improve housing. It also includes developing programs for
health, education and
job training and creation.
“Living under a roof creates a sense of belonging to the community,”
Berrios explains. “That
allows residents to focus on creating a proper
home by seeking education and better health conditions.”
Since it was founded in 1997 by Berríos and a small group of university
students at La Universidad Católica in
Santiago, the organization has built
42,000 homes, has recruited 200,000
volunteers and won the trust and participation of governments and multinational corporations throughout
the hemisphere.
“We’ve gained a reputation for being well-organized and transparent
in the eyes of governments and pri-
Most of the volunteers are under 30,
which Berríos credits for much of the
organization’s driving energy and its
transnational appeal. The young, of-
ten privileged volunteers that work
side-by-side with marginalized pop-
ulations “have stopped talking about
‘this country’ and have started talk-
ing about ‘my country’,” Berríos says.
“They want to be protagonists of a
better future.”
vate companies, but also among the
general population,” says Ignacio
González, the group’s U.S. director
for development and a former volunteer builder.
In 2001, the organization moved
beyond Chile to open offices in Lima
and San Salvador. Today, it operates
in 15 Latin American countries.
Techo has expanded its ambitious
goal to eradicate substandard housing in all of Latin America. Plans are
underway to build another 20,000
houses, and add another 50,000 volunteers throughout the region by
the end of the year, where an estimated 15 million citizens live in substandard housing—or don’t have
homes at all.
In 2007, President Michelle Bache-
UN TECHO PARA MI PAÍS
24 Americas Quarterly FALL 2009
AMERICASQUARTERLY.ORG