Showing all projects for Luxury Items
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Engineers Without Borders (EWB) spends less than 0.4 per cent of their income on fundraising costs. Engineers and students across Australia use their spare time to run fundraising events that support EWB’s programs in Australia and overseas. Your ...
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1.1 billion people around the globe lack access to clean water and 2.6 billion people lack basic sanitation. Your gift will help Engineers Without Borders continue to work with communities in South Asia and South East Asia, assisting them to acces...
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Bikes provide newly arrived refugees with an affordable form of transport, connect them to the broader community and promote healthy living. Your gift will support Engineers Without Borders Spokes in the Wheel Program; where volunteers fix donated...
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Fun, interactive engineering workshops for Aboriginal school students help close the gap in education standards between Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal Australians. They give Aboriginal students an understanding of engineering career pathways and ar...
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We compost at home, school and work so why not help a developing community to do the same? Your gift will help communities to compost their waste into usable materials to create green spaces in urban environments.
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The gift of a smokeless stove means far more to a woman in Nepal than just having a tool to cook dinner on. It frees her from the health problems caused by cooking on an indoor fire, saves time spent collecting fire wood and reduces air pollution....
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Provide the tools for development with this handy gift. Engineers Without Borders (EWB) works with disadvantaged communities throughout the Asia and Australia, to improve their quality of life through sustainable and appropriate engineering projec...
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Engineers Without Borders (EWB) is working with Schools of Prosthetics and Orthotics in Cambodia and Sri Lanka to teach students how to prescribe, manufacture and fit artificial limbs. Your gift supports EWB’s work with these schools and has a lon...
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In Cambodia, more people own a mobile phone than have access to a toilet. Engineers Without Borders volunteers are working with local organisations in Cambodia, Vietnam, Indonesia, East Timor, India and Australia to develop new types of toilets, i...
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A water tank in a school or medical clinic in Cambodia means that people can access safe drinking water all year round. In many areas throughout the country there is no accessible ground water or it is unsuitable for drinking, so enough rainwater ...
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