Global perspective Human stories

UN agency for Palestinian refugees to build green schools in Gaza

Students at an UNRWA girls’ school in East Jerusalem read in the schoolyard  with the Al-Aqsa mosque in the background.
UNRWA
Students at an UNRWA girls’ school in East Jerusalem read in the schoolyard with the Al-Aqsa mosque in the background.

UN agency for Palestinian refugees to build green schools in Gaza

The United Nations relief agency for Palestinian refugees said today it has formed a partnership with a renowned architect to build 20 environmentally-friendly schools in the Gaza Strip.

The blueprint for the “environmental zero impact” schools to be built by UN Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) in partnership with award-winning architect Mario Cucinella, renowned for green architectural design and technology, will be showcased at the ongoing UN Climate Change Conference in Durban, South Africa.

“This project is a first for UNRWA, which we hope will lead to the creation of environmentally friendly schools in the five areas where we work,” said Filippo Grandi, the UNRWA Commissioner-General. Such schools will also be built in the West Bank, Jordan, Lebanon and Syria in future, he said.

“We teach half a million students throughout the Middle East region. UNRWA is grateful to the Kuwait Fund, which is funding the pilot school through the Islamic Development Bank. We hope that all donors will come forward as this exciting initiative moves ahead,” Mr. Grandi added.

At a cost of $2 million – about the same cost of building a regular UNRWA school – the schools will provide educational facilities for 800 students each in an atmosphere conducive to the highest levels of academic achievement, according to the agency. The schools are self-sustaining in water and energy.

The aim is to promote high academic standards within the schools, while creating greater awareness and respect for the environment outside.