The river that weaves through the dense slums of Mathare behind the KINATCO Community Hall is one of the main rivers in Nairobi. It is unfortunately highly polluted and unusable. MaSCA is leading a project to rehabilitate the Mathare River and its surroundings by engaging local youth in clean-up activities, landscaping, community infrastructure development, and the creation of sustainable sanitation and waste management systems.
The project involves waste management, scenic restoration, soil conservation, landscaping, and the development of parks, trails and infrastructure like benches and outdoor meeting spaces – all while engaging youth in the design and implementation.
The sad state of the Mathare River has not developed overnight, but is the result of decades of neglect, in which the river became the depository for industrial and agricultural waste and the dumping ground for municipal garbage. The Mathare River goes through the large slum of Mathare, which is located in the Eastlands of Nairobi, Kenya. It’s the oldest and second largest urban slum in Kenya after Kibera. Public utilities are practically non-existent. Mathare has few toilets, and the river serves as the slum’s sewerage system. Water is sold by vendors at comparably high prices, resulting in residents consuming less water than they should. With few systems of solid waste collection, waste is subsequently dumped into the same river where residents do their washing. The lack of access to clean water, inadequate medical facilities, and refuse, exacerbates health related issues including dysentery, hepatitis and cholera.