A mobile workshop against destruction

Veröffentlicht am 9. November 2022

von CADUS-PR

Vor einem alten Wohnhaus werden lange Holzbalken zurecht geschnitten. Neben dem Gebäude parkt ein Transporter, der zu einer Werkstatt umgebaut ist. Vor dem Fahrzeug stehen eine Frau und ein Hund.
Ein Wohnhaus wird hergerichtet. Mittlerweile wohnen dort geflüchtete Menschen aus der Ostukraine. Foto: CADUS

With war comes destruction. But how can houses be made habitable again and public buildings made usable again? Together with Ukrainian and German partner organizations, we have taken a mobile workshop for reconstruction on the road.

Since mid-May, we have been using the mobile Crisis Response Makerspace in Ukraine, a van fully equipped with power and hand tools. With a team of volunteer craftspeople, the vehicle served as a mobile workshop. Since the beginning, our Makerspace team has worked with the Ukrainian partner initiative Metalab to convert several vacant buildings into accommodation for refugees within Ukraine.

The roof of a house is being insulated so that people displaced from eastern Ukraine can live here. Photo: CADUS

For several weeks, the team was deployed in the area around Makariw, near Butscha and Irpin, where countless public buildings had been destroyed during the occupation by the Russian army in March and April. Together with Ukrainian volunteers from the “Built Ukraine Together” initiative, our team was able to restore a badly damaged fire station and a partially destroyed school so that the buildings are now usable again.

The fire station is being rebuilt together with Ukrainian volunteers. Photo: CADUS

A farewell group photo with the local fire department. Photo: CADUS

In the meantime, our makerspace was in Ivano-Frankivsk, where it formed the basis for the development of a bus into an intensive care unit – the MICU bus.
The mobile workshop is now back in Berlin and is being prepared for its next assignment.

Everyone pitches in to rebuild the fire station. The residents are rebuilding their villages and are happy to receive any support. Photo: CADUS

Published:
Author:

It’s hard to stop the bleeding once it started

March 24th, 2026|

Photographer Julius Bauer visited our Medevac team in Dnipro, Ukraine, in February. In this guest article, he gives us a brief insight into the everyday life of our colleagues on site, takes us along on the transport of a wounded patient and shares his thoughts on the recurring war trauma in Ukraine and his impressions of life in the war zone. All photos in this article were taken by him.

It’s hard to stop the bleeding once it started

March 24th, 2026|

Der Fotograf Julius Bauer hat im Februar unser Medevac-Team in Dnipro in der Ukraine besucht. In diesem Gastbeitrag gewährt er uns einen kurzen Einblick in den Alltag unserer Kolleg*innen vor Ort, nimmt uns mit auf den Transport eines verwundeten Patienten und teilt seine Gedanken zum wiederkehrendem Kriegstrauma der Ukraine und seine Eindrücke vom Leben  im Kriegsgebiet. Alle Fotos in diesem Beitrag stammen von ihm.

Abonniere jetzt unseren Newsletter!

Bleibe informiert über unsere Einsätze, Veranstaltungen und Themen aus der Humanitären Nothilfe.

E-Mail*

Deine Spende macht es möglich, dass wir unsere Ressourcen und Fähigkeiten dort einsetzen, wo sie am dringendsten gebraucht werden.

Go to Top