Strategic Partners
The issues our community faces guide us, and we connect with specialized partners globally to find the ideal solutions.
Our power stems from the bonds we've nurtured both in Thailand and internationally, spanning government authorities, enterprises, and grassroots community members adept at making things happen.
Our power stems from the bonds we've nurtured both in Thailand and internationally, spanning government authorities, enterprises, and grassroots community members adept at making things happen.
Creating Learning Environments and Classrooms
Our strategic partners Building Futures Thailand does just that – it builds schools and libraries for kids who do not have such essentials.
The organization started in the aftermath of the tsunami that ravished to west coast of Thailand.
Founder Kris Edwards asked herself what she could do to help, and standing in the ruin of a school flattened by the great wave, she decided that she would rebuild schools.
By 2014, the job was done, but rather than quit, she looked further afield and found Warm Heart. No tsunami destroyed the educational infrastructure of Phrao; we never had much to start with.
By November, Building Futures Thailand had constructed Barb’s Place, a large community education center and public access computer lab serving all of Phrao – and named for Kris’ mom, Barbara, a dedicated teacher.
The organization started in the aftermath of the tsunami that ravished to west coast of Thailand.
Founder Kris Edwards asked herself what she could do to help, and standing in the ruin of a school flattened by the great wave, she decided that she would rebuild schools.
By 2014, the job was done, but rather than quit, she looked further afield and found Warm Heart. No tsunami destroyed the educational infrastructure of Phrao; we never had much to start with.
By November, Building Futures Thailand had constructed Barb’s Place, a large community education center and public access computer lab serving all of Phrao – and named for Kris’ mom, Barbara, a dedicated teacher.
Providing Wheelchairs For Those In Need
Knowing the importance of providing wheelchairs to those in need, Luc Maastricht, a wheelchair user himself, founded The Wheelchair Project.
The Wheelchair Project operates out of The Rajanagarindra Institute of Child Development, the one hospital serving developmentally disabled children in Thailand’s 17 Northern provinces.
Confined to work within the hospital system, The Wheelchair Project cannot access the great majority of rural people who need help, so Warm Heart helps to expand Luc’s reach.
With our knowledge of every elderly and disabled person in Phrao, working with our strategic partners at The Wheelchair Project we can bring truckloads of people in need of wheelchairs to Luc and his team who can then outfit them.
The Wheelchair Project operates out of The Rajanagarindra Institute of Child Development, the one hospital serving developmentally disabled children in Thailand’s 17 Northern provinces.
Confined to work within the hospital system, The Wheelchair Project cannot access the great majority of rural people who need help, so Warm Heart helps to expand Luc’s reach.
With our knowledge of every elderly and disabled person in Phrao, working with our strategic partners at The Wheelchair Project we can bring truckloads of people in need of wheelchairs to Luc and his team who can then outfit them.
Offering Solutions To Communities Worldwide
Warm Heart has developed strategic partners with three university chapters of Engineers Without Borders and one professional chapter to solve community drinking water problems.
Hang Tam, Mae Sai Na Lau and Mae Bon Villages:
Like many villages in Phrao, three months a year these villages must choose between drinking water and water for their animals and fields. The Stevens Institute of Technology student chapter of Engineers Without Borders spent a summer refurbishing an old water pipeline from the mountains and building storage tanks to ensure that villagers will never have to choose again. (2015)
Mae Wan Sub-District:
Twenty years ago when its water system was constructed, Mae Wan had 2,500 inhabitants. Today it has 6,000. Agricultural acreage has quintupled. Nothing has been done to expand the water system. The Honolulu professional chapter of Engineers Without Borders is building a water budget for the sub-district as the basis for the development of a new water system. (2013-present)
Nong Bua Village:
The villagers of Nong Bua came to Warm Heart because their water was undrinkable. We found the filtration system in complete disrepair. The Rutgers University student chapter of Engineers Without Borders spent three summers turning it into the model for Phrao District. (2008-2010)
Nong Pit Village:
:In the middle of the dry season, the headman of Nong Pit came to tell us that the village’s water supplies had run dry and to ask if we could help. A visit revealed a small spring more than a mile up the mountain above the village. The following summer, The Collage of New Jersey student chapter of Engineers Without Borders built large storage tanks at the spring and ran a pipe line down to the village. (2009)
Hang Tam, Mae Sai Na Lau and Mae Bon Villages:
Like many villages in Phrao, three months a year these villages must choose between drinking water and water for their animals and fields. The Stevens Institute of Technology student chapter of Engineers Without Borders spent a summer refurbishing an old water pipeline from the mountains and building storage tanks to ensure that villagers will never have to choose again. (2015)
Mae Wan Sub-District:
Twenty years ago when its water system was constructed, Mae Wan had 2,500 inhabitants. Today it has 6,000. Agricultural acreage has quintupled. Nothing has been done to expand the water system. The Honolulu professional chapter of Engineers Without Borders is building a water budget for the sub-district as the basis for the development of a new water system. (2013-present)
Nong Bua Village:
The villagers of Nong Bua came to Warm Heart because their water was undrinkable. We found the filtration system in complete disrepair. The Rutgers University student chapter of Engineers Without Borders spent three summers turning it into the model for Phrao District. (2008-2010)
Nong Pit Village:
:In the middle of the dry season, the headman of Nong Pit came to tell us that the village’s water supplies had run dry and to ask if we could help. A visit revealed a small spring more than a mile up the mountain above the village. The following summer, The Collage of New Jersey student chapter of Engineers Without Borders built large storage tanks at the spring and ran a pipe line down to the village. (2009)
Combining Adventure With Giving To Kids
Trekking for Kids is a remarkable organization, one of the most unique tour operators in the world. We are very happy they are among our strategic partners!
Sign up for one of Trekking’s tours and you pay for the tour, donate $1,000 to a project to help children that will be part of the tour and commit yourself to raising as much more money as possible.
In 2013 Trekking chose Warm Heart as their project and transformed our children’s homes.
Trekkers’ donations doubled the size of our dining room and provided the materials to build our gorgeous new girls’ house from mud and straw, affectionately dubbed the “mud palace” by the Warm Heart girls.
Sign up for one of Trekking’s tours and you pay for the tour, donate $1,000 to a project to help children that will be part of the tour and commit yourself to raising as much more money as possible.
In 2013 Trekking chose Warm Heart as their project and transformed our children’s homes.
Trekkers’ donations doubled the size of our dining room and provided the materials to build our gorgeous new girls’ house from mud and straw, affectionately dubbed the “mud palace” by the Warm Heart girls.