projects

Little Bay All Age School
The foundation is currently laying the ground work for its 2010 summer capital project. Located twenty-five minutes from Negril there is a small fishing village called Little Bay. It remains largely unchanged from the time more than 30 years ago when Bob Marley used to journey there for peace and quiet and a little roast fish on the beach. The Little Bay All Age School was built in the early 1970's. It is a steel beam structure without adequate sanitation or kitchen facilities - where children eat and learn at the same desks, have no access to technology, no safe and engaging play and sports space, and no consistent source of potable water. What they do have is a dedicated and caring staff and leadership who make the very best of this challenging environment everyday as they help prepare their students for the rigors of high school and beyond. We are in a collaborative process of dialogue with the various stakeholders so that priority needs and solutions are developed as a team and ultimately achieved together. The addition of a modernized, well-outfitted kitchen and eating area, along with some key improvements to the infrastructure and amenities at Little Bay All Age will have a dramatic impact on how children learn and how teachers feel as professionals in their workplace.

Negril Public Library
In 2009 the Foundation completed its most ambitious project to date - a complete modernization and substantial expansion of the Negril Community Library. The library is Negril's oldest extant building and housed the original police station. It is located next door to the Negril All Age School and the Negril Basic School, the Foundation's first two partners in improving places where children learn in Negril and whose students are amongst the Library's most frequent users.

For decades the library had too little space and resources to meet the growing needs and numbers of local students and community residents. The refurbished, expanded facility is well over 4 times larger, equipped with 15 new computers, thousands of new books, a spacious reading room and book stack section, as well as a colorful and engaging junior library. When the Rockhouse Foundation teamed with the Jamaica Library Service (JLS) and the Negril community in 2007 to discuss the proposed library renovation it never imagined what a radically successful process was about to unfold. Armed with an inspired vision jointly crafted with JLS, a committee of local residents, and architects Chris Stone and David Douglass of Cornerstone Design, we broke ground in July, 2008 and have now handed over a signature addition to the Negril community. The new, improved library space is a much needed resource and reflects the Foundation's ambition to support learning for children of all ages.

The new library reflects the Foundation's ambition to support learning for children of all ages. With the completion of the library in 2009, the Rockhouse Hotel and Foundation has provided over US$1 million in community projects benefiting children.

Click the link to view the video profiling the Negril Library Project

Negril All Age School
The Rockhouse Foundation completed its inaugural project: the total renovation of the Negril All Age School. Thirty years ago Negril's only public elementary school served just 100 students, many of them children of fishermen and farmers whose simple lifestyle had defined the community for generations. Presently, the school enrolls over 500 children, a five-fold increase reflecting Negril's growth as a tourist destination and magnet for thousands of Jamaicans seeking steady work. And yet, until the Foundation intervened, the physical plant had literally stood still in time. The renovation redressed decades of over-crowding, deferred maintenance, poor ventilation, inadequate wiring, and leaky roofs.

During the summer of 2004, and then again two years later in 2006, the Foundation took advantage of the brief eight-week summer vacations a very compressed window to complete the extensive renovations and improvements. A remarkable team consisting of craftsmen, sub-contractors, Rockhouse staff, vendors and volunteers from the local community combined efforts and contributed to the following improvements:

During the course of the renovation, the Rockhouse Foundation and the Rockhouse Hotel invested approximately US$160,000 in the Negril All Age School Project. The project generated a tremendous amount of local enthusiasm and support and became a model for relationships the Foundation has built. The Foundation worked closely with the School principal, its teachers, the local school board and community groups, the Negril Chamber of Commerce, the Ministry of Education, and the local Member of Parliament, each of whom lent their full support to the project.

The success of the project is shared with other organizations, most notably the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), which made a significant financial contribution to the Foundation. In addition, the U.S. Embassy in Kingston donated ten late model computers to the School's new technology and literacy center, and through the Foundation's partnership with the Peace Corps, the School is assigned an experienced technology volunteer every two years.

In an unforeseen use of the newly renovated facilities, the School emerged unscathed after providing temporary shelter to over 150 people when Hurricane Ivan ravaged Negril in 2004.

We are dedicated to long-term, meaningful partnerships. At the Negril All Age School the results of our capital investment are palpable. At the Negril All-Age School and the Negril Basic School, we support the children and their community's pursuit of excellence, while assisting in the maintenance of high quality facilities. To that end, the Foundation sponsors the following:

Negril Basic School
At the back of the property upon which the Negril All Age School is located is Negril Basic School. As the only public Pre-K in Negril, and because of its proximity the Basic School is the primary feeder for the All Age School and share many of the improved facilities described above in common. As the children departed for summer vacation, heavy equipment began clearing trees and debris in preparation for the Foundation's second major project: transformation of the Basic School into a stand-alone pre-school with new furnishings and materials that now enable staff to better meet the developmental and pedagogical needs of Negril's three to five year olds. Specific improvements include:

In addition, construction of a new playground for the Negril Basic School will begin in the coming months. Students of the Basic School do not currently have a dedicated play area or equipment to complement improved conditions in their indoor learning space. Accordingly, we will create a new play structure and surrounding play area, complete with outdoor toys, balls, tricycles, hula-hoops, etc.

We are dedicated to long-term, meaningful partnerships. The Negril Basic School which serves children ages three through five and is the primary feeder for the Negril All Age School. For many years, sub-standard roofing, poor structural integrity, wiring and furniture were a discouraging backdrop to hundreds of children's first introduction to school. At the Negril All Age School and the Negril Basic School, we support the children and their community's pursuit of excellence, while assisting in the maintenance of high quality facilities. To that end, the Foundation sponsors the following:

The Rockhouse Foundation's Roots
Commitment to the community is a cornerstone of the Rockhouse Hotel's vision since its establishment. In the early years, prior to formalizing its programs with the Rockhouse Foundation, the community endeavors were focused on the inner city in Kingston, Jamaica's capital city.

The Trenchtown Development Association (TTDA) is a community-based, non-profit group formed in Kingston in 1995 to promote peace, self-reliance and the redevelopment of a neighborhood which experiences high levels of violence and poverty. Trenchtown was home to Bob Marley prior to his recording success, and in addition to promoting the world famous culture and history of this inner-city neighborhood, TTDA's objective is to maximize the community's resources and develop programs to ensure all members of the community have access to education and health facilities. In the years before the formation of the Foundation, the Rockhouse Hotel worked with the TTDA to realize the success of the following projects:

Additionally, the Hotel helped the TTDA create broader awareness of their cause and source new funding by promoting their story to magazine editors and introducing their good work to potential donors.

Closer to home, the Rockhouse Hotel began its first project at the Negril All Age School: the rehabilitation of the Reading Room. The Hotel funded the purchase of materials and labor for the painting, tiling, electrical installation of lights and fan, and secured the room with new doors. The Hotel also became the sole sponsor of the school's breakfast program, providing a daily cooked breakfast for up to 100 children who would otherwise start the day without a meal. This program, which continues to this day, was previously funded by US AID whose three year commitment was expiring.

At the end of 2003, the owners of the Hotel invited key early supporters of its charitable work to join them in forming the Rockhouse Foundation, a 501 (c)(3) organization.

Rockhouse Foundation
PO Box 2460
New York, NY 10008

t:
1.212.807.0868
f:
1.646.253.7730
e:
info@rockhousefoundation.org

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