Photos of Emergency Relief Shelters & Tents (also see: Testimonials)Date: December 13, 2010 Just a quick update on the status of the tents we purchased from you. All but the last 251 tents arrived Sunday in Lake Maracaibo. I understand the initial reaction is they are quite pleased with these tents. By our calculations, they should provide shelter for up to almost 10,000 people left homeless by the recent floods. Please extend our It has been a pleasure working with such professionals to ensure the success of this humanitarian endeavor. Regards, About a year in Haiti and still standing strong!
This is a photo sent to me from the local Santa Cruz woman who goes to Haiti with her Haitian husband. She was the one who brought a couple tents there. She keeps spotting our domes (probably mostly the UN domes) around the country.
Begin forwarded message: From: chelsea The tents we ordered have made it to our relief camp in Caneille. The people are greatly blessed to see them and how large they are.
Once they figured out how they went together, they all went up quickly.
As we have traveled about and encountered other tent camps, we have seen a number of Shelter Systems tents. Looks like you've had your hands full. Lane Gibson
We set one up on the rooftop of his uncle's house so they could see what it looked like and so they'd believe me that they're really 14' in diameter. It wouldn't have fit where they had their temporary shelter if they hadn't taken part of it down. I think they will sleep very well in here. The 14' tents are designed for 8-10 people. Andre's aunts, uncles and cousins are 14, but they said they fit fine. I thought they could leave up the other structure and half of them could move into the dome here on the rooftop, but they're too afraid that the neighboring walls would fall in on them in the event of another larger earthquake. They don't seem to believe me that the pressure is off that fault line, so Port-au-Prince should be good to go for 50-100 years. That's the numbers I heard in Santa Cruz after our 6.9 in 1989. It's been 20 years and nothing big has happened there so far. Andre's uncle measured and decided it would work. They started setting it up even while they were still taking down part of it to make room. I was worried they'd rip it with a nail. They did make one small hole, which I patched with duct tape.
Here's another cousin and her mother at night, arranging the bedding in their new home. They're very grateful and feel much more secure now. The next door neighbor is repairing their house. They got a yellow tag on their house. This house with the trapped SUV got a red tag meaning it must be demolished. Andre's family's house got a green tag meaning it's inhabitable, but they are too afraid still
Bam Iran after earthquake 30'er as a werehouse. Photo by J. White / Mercy Corps
Set up in Bam
Venezuela Flood Shelter Relief
![]() Quick and Easy to set up
![]() Family Relief Shelter
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