Innovation and sustainability in Amazonian community ecological toilets: integration of contemporary technologies and local materials
Synopsis
Sustainable sanitation in the Ecuadorian Amazon, particularly in Misahuallí–Tena, faces a critical challenge due to limited infrastructure and the urgent need to mitigate pollution in the Napo River. In response, a prototype of a Community Ecological Toilet (BEC) was developed at the Kamak Maki tourist center. The main objective was to implement a functional, low-cost, and rapidly deployable solution that combined contemporary technologies with local materials, following the principles of circular economy and adaptive design. The project was developed through a tripartite partnership among the local community, the Universidad Regional Amazónica Ikiam, and the Ecuadorian Fund for Development Cooperation (FECD), which provided material funding, complemented by community labor and academic resources. Additionally, circular economy strategies were integrated, such as foundations made with terracement and recycled tires donated by SEGINUS. The methodology incorporated the Dragon Dreaming approach, ensuring active participation throughout all phases. The prototype featured a dry toilet system with waste separation and rainwater harvesting. The results demonstrated total water-use efficiency in sanitation and direct mitigation of river pollution, validating the model’s agile, adaptable, and socially appropriate construction — thereby promoting responsible and resilient environmental management in neotropical biohabitats.
Published
Categories
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.




