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Article 25

Article 25 UK
Non-profit organisation
Industry Architecture, International Development, Non Profit
Founded 2006
Founder Maxwell Hutchinson
Headquarters London, UK
Website [www.article-25.org]

Article 25 is a UK registered charity that manages sustainable architecture projects in areas of extreme poverty and disaster. In 2015, Article 25 merged with US-based ARCHIVE Global – another architectural nonprofit focused on the link between health and housing – to broaden their operations and work together for the benefit of some of the world's most vulnerable societies.

Established in 2006 as ‘Architects for Aid’, the name was changed to Article 25 in 2008, making reference to the principle of the 25th Article of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights that safe and adequate shelter is a fundamental human right. Caught up in the Indian Ocean tsunami in 2004, Maxwell Hutchinson recognised the potential impact the built environment could have on saving lives and preventing natural hazards from turning into full-blown disasters. Article 25 has grown to accommodate a board of seven distinguished trustees’, eight permanent staff, 15 volunteers, ten professional partner organisations, and around 700 student members.

Article 25’s projects range from one-off building projects for community-based organisations to large master planning projects for international organisations, including technical consultancy services for NGOs who have little access to vital design expertise. It has consulted with government organisations, NGOs and relief organisations on reconstruction projects including latrine blocks and schools in Haiti, earthquake resistant homes in Pakistan, and a new media centre in Port Harcourt. Some of the completed projects include an award-winning earthquake resistant housing programme in Northern Pakistan with Muslim Aid, and an award-nominated school for street children in Goa, India, with El Shaddai Street Child Rescue. The charity has tendered over 50 projects in 20 countries across five continents.



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