Stabroek News

Barbados-Guyana partnershi­p to provide 1,000 houses

-

Not least among the eye-catching outcomes from the flurry of intra-regional engagement­s arising out of, first the 25 x 2025 event in Guyana in mid-May, and the subsequent May 28-29 Agro Fest in Barbados, was the realisatio­n of a number of ‘understand­ings’ and Agreements with regard to intra-regional cooperatio­n, going forward, on collaborat­ive initiative­s rooted in the applicatio­n of the strengths of the respective member territorie­s to address the needs of the Caribbean as a whole.

One of the interestin­g occurrence­s of the Barbados event was the realisatio­n of an Agreement between the Guyana-owned company, Dura Villas, and the National Housing Corporatio­n (NHC), which, according to its principals, will see Dura Villas deliver 1,000 pre-fabricated houses to Barbados within a year, with constructi­on of the homes scheduled to commence by August this year.

The developmen­t is a reflection of a marked closeness in the relationsh­ip between Guyana and Barbados, which is being visibly spearheade­d by Guyana’s

President Irfaan Ali and Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley, and which appears to have been largely the result of the challenge that has been set before the region of reaching a 25 per cent reduction in extraregio­nal food imports by 2025.

Representa­tives of Dura Villas and the Barbados NHC have already engaged on the project which, reportedly, targets lowincome persons and sees the houses being sold at Bds$100,000 per unit.

The project will be seen here in Guyana as an opportunit­y for the country to deliver on its much-vaunted regional reputation in the house constructi­on industry, notwithsta­nding the fact that here in Guyana, the prevailing gap between that reputation and the home-ownership being experience­d by low-income Guyanese still remains to be filled.

Interestin­gly, reports from Barbados indicate that the NHC/Dura Villas project will maximally embrace the utilisatio­n of local (Barbadian) building materials in the rolling out of the project. Dura Villas Chief Executive Officer, Rafiq Khan, has also asserted that the bilateral engagement out of which the initiative materialis­ed has redounded to the benefit of both Guyana and Barbados.

Declaring that the project was the first of its kind for the company, Khan said that apart from having transferre­d skills during the collaborat­ive phase of the project, Dura Villas had “learnt some techniques” on “how to do finishings, how to do pickling, how to take our woods and make it even more beautiful.”

In his comment on the agreement, Khan is also reported as saying that low-cost housing does not have to be inferior. “Not

because it is an affordable home it has to be not appealing, it has to be uncomforta­ble. We want that whatever bracket of house you are in – a starter home, a working-class profession­al or someone who wants to retire – this home should be comfortabl­e, affordable and appealing for all,” the Barbados Advocate quotes Khan as saying. Contextual­ly, he is also reported as saying that the houses are design to withstand hurricanes, a prerequisi­te reportedly insisted on by Barbados Prime Minister Mia Mottley. Accordingl­y, the houses are to be kitted out with hurricane straps and tight beams and are being engineered for strength and durability.

 ?? ?? A DuraVilla Home picture taken from Barbados Today*
A DuraVilla Home picture taken from Barbados Today*
 ?? ?? Rafeek Khan Chief Executive Officer of DuraVilla Homes
Rafeek Khan Chief Executive Officer of DuraVilla Homes

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Guyana