Service Learning - Global Doing Good
  • Projects
    • Homebuilding
    • Two Roads
  • Contact
  • DONATE
  • Scholarships
  • Blog

Homebuilding Continues in Costa Rica Through Efforts of Many

3/17/2014

0 Comments

 
A group of Concordia Lutheran High School students from Houston, Texas, journeyed to Costa Rica in mid-March to build a home for a poor family. This was the second group from the school to engage in a service project under the auspices of Global Travel Alliance, but more specifically under the non-profit division, Global Doing Good.

As in the past, Global Travel Alliance staff and Costa Rican residents Daniel Granados and his wife Andrea served as coordinators. Their job is to find families that qualify for a home, coordinate with a contractor, and take care of the details of housing and feeding the students from Houston.

Homebuilding in Costa Rica has garnered the attention of groups all across the United States. As we look forward to fall, 2014, and into 2015, ten group leaders have already indicated they would like to reserve a time slot for their volunteers to participate. The groups range in age from adults to teens. Some hail from churches and some from private and public schools.

Besides building the home, the crews have some very interesting experiences as noted in some of the following comments:

I learned that termites do, in fact, taste like breath mints. Question: how did that amazing revelation come about?

Frogs are scary creatures. Hmm. Must be some rather large ones down there.

On the more serious side, kids were touched and impacted in multiple ways by the experience.

I learned that we have it too easy compared to the lives of those in not so prosperous areas of the world.

But going to Costa Rica isn’t just about homebuilding. Our travelers will get a close-up look at this amazing country that has been called the Switzerland of Central America. Participants will walk the rain forest trails where they will thrill to a large variety of flora and fauna. One of the most astounding sights is watching a flock of Macaws take wing. Ancient and active volcanoes are also prevalent in the country. Some hikes encompass eight different eco-zones. And don’t forget the Costa Rican beaches, some of the most pristine and beautiful in the entire world. You can experience all this and more while you assist a needy family move from a tin and scrap wood shanty into a serviceable new home. Call Global Travel Alliance today toll-free at 1-866-313-2577 and ask for Steve, Bryan, or Jeff for more information about homebuilding in Costa Rica.

Maybe you can’t make the trip yourself, but your support for these life-changing projects would be greatly appreciated. Please be advised that these homes, while sturdy and weather proof, are built to very minimum standards. They total 600 square feet with a common area and two bedrooms. The bathroom facilities and cooking area are outside. Materials for one home cost in the range of $7000. Thank you for considering supporting our homebuilding projects in Costa Rica.

As the group coordinator and Global Travel Alliance Vice President, Steve Maehl, noted after the Concordia project , “We continue to build bridges and change lives through efforts such as these.”

0 Comments

In Memory of Aviella Hope

3/12/2014

0 Comments

 
A chance meeting in a paint store between Julie Dasinger and Pam Peterson of Global Travel Alliance resulted in a home being built for a family in Costa Rica. Kirby, Julie’s husband, and she had been discussing what they might do to honor the memory of their granddaughter, Aviella Hope, who was lost in mid-pregnancy. Pam and Jeff had previously told them about Global Doing Good and some of the projects they were involved in. To Julie and Kirby, building a home for less fortunate people in Costa Rica seemed like a fitting memorial. They discussed the idea with their children and spouses, Kira (Far’d), Kelsey (Kyle) and Kaleb (Katie). The consensus was they should do this. 

Daniel Granados and his wife Andrea, Global Travel Alliance staff members in Costa Rica, had already set the plans in place to build the new home for Arturo, Maria and their boys Jorge and Kevin. Daniel met the Dasinger family at their hotel at 7 a.m. each morning and took them to the home site where the ladies began painting the exterior and the men began plastering the inside walls. 

Daniel’s father (who the Dasinger family nicknamed Papa Smurf) had overseen building the home, which was basically completed, except for the projects the Dasingers worked on. 

“Their original home was neat and clean,” observed Kirby, “but it was not stable. During hard rains, water poured in and ran through the house. It was just cobbled together.” 

Arturo and the boys worked right along side of the Dasinger family and Maria kept them supplied with fresh fruit and fruit juice as they labored under the tropical sun. 

“The hardest work,” recalled Kirby, “was mixing concrete on the ground for the interior floors. We made a pile of sand, added gravel, cement and water and began mixing with shovels. What a workout!”

Arturo, Maria and their sons were ecstatic and grateful, but Kirby pointed out that his family was also grateful for the opportunity to serve.“Yes, we impacted this family, but we were impacted too,” he said. “We realized that we take so much for granted living here in America. All of us understand after this experience how very blessed we are. I would recommend that other families or church or civic groups think about doing this. It was very rewarding to us all.” 

The home, named Casa de Esperanza (House of Hope) is nothing special by American standards. It measures about 600 square feet with two bedrooms, a bathroom and a common area that encompasses the living room, dining space and the kitchen. 
0 Comments
    Picture

    Serve Others & Do Good Blog

    We lead student and group adventures around the world. We serve people in need while doing it. Read our stories here and become inspired to serve in your own community or somehwere abroad. Learn more about what Global Doing Good really does and who we serve.
    ​

    Categories

    All
    Home Building
    Service Scholars
    Two Roads Project

    Archives

    February 2018
    September 2017
    July 2017
    August 2016
    October 2015
    July 2015
    March 2015
    October 2014
    September 2014
    June 2014
    April 2014
    March 2014
    October 2013
    August 2013
    March 2013
    January 2013

    Picture
Service Learning Student Travel
Projects
Homebuilding
​
Two Roads
Blog
Contact
Donate
   #globaldoinggood
© 2022 Global Doing Good 
​

321 East Main Street
Suite 215
Bozeman, MT 59715
877-251-3609
info@globaldoinggood.org 

Privacy and Terms
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture
Picture