Diana Musara
Upcycling plastic for sustainable schools

Diana Musara in the classroom made of eco-bricks, Diepsloot © Thom Pierce 2023
There are three things that Diana Musara is passionate about; entrepreneurship, education and the environment. All of these passions now intersect through her NPO, Earthly Touch Foundation, but they started with a school made out of bottles.
Whilst volunteering as a director for Khensani’s collection, an after-school program in Diepsloot that supports struggling students with extra lessons, Diana took it upon herself to build a new classroom for the growing number of learners, with over 70 in one room.
At a women's network event hosted by Hirshes, Diana was introduced to the concept of eco-bricks. She realised that this simple idea would provide her with a cost-effective building material which also had environmental benefits.
Eco-bricks are 2-litre soft drink bottles packed tightly with plastic, a well-insulated alternative to regular bricks. They also provide an upcycling solution for single-use plastics.
The school receives large donations of clothes, so Diana put her business background to work and created an exchange program whereby people from the surrounding community could make eco-bricks from plastic they had collected and exchange the bottles for clothes.
Diepsloot has a plastic problem. Discarded litter is strewn everywhere, clogging the water systems and piled on the side of the roads. By offering clothes in exchange for plastic trash, Diana was helping to clean up the neighbourhood whilst also providing an opportunity to anyone who wanted to get involved.
So far they have received around 5,000 eco-bricks through the exchange program.
“I want to do something that can add value and change people’s lives.”
The school made out of bottles provides an environmentally friendly structure that is well-insulated and an innovative solution for plastic waste that is not being collected by the municipality. The labour brings much-needed work to an area that is struggling for jobs, and the building provides a valuable after-school facility for kids in the area.
With the threat of global warming and carbon emission, the new eco-brick school will contribute to the avoidance of +- 50 tons of carbon into our environment as a result of repurposed plastic bottles, the use of solar, and limiting the use of cement for construction.
That’s quite a lot of value through one relatively simple idea.
Through the Earthly Touch Foundation, Diana wants to take the idea even further by mentoring construction students in eco-brick building and training them in how to run a business. Find out more at https://www.earthlytouchfoundation.com
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