\\ \\/ / 37WanchiEco-lodgeUN HABITAT’SCatalogue of SolutionsMarch | April 2026
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CURRENT IMAGE: KETEMA JOURNAL18MARCH - APRIL 2026COVER IMAGE: KETEMA JOURNAL09 Editor’s MessageWanchi Eco Lodge 18 //WESTWAY ARCHITECTS, RASS ARCHITECTSOn the CoverWanchi Eco Lodge Wanchi, OromiaImage: Ketema JournalYear 7 // № [email protected] News Update38 UN Habitat’s Catalogue of Solutions// Summary by Ketema JournalSupplier List 4246
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SCAN QR TO SUBSCRIBE TO KJ@ketema_journal 7th Year 2nd Issue+251 900 57 19 12www.ketemajournal.comAddis Ababa, EthiopiaThe African Building PlatformEditorial AdvisoryAddis MebratuMaheder GebremedhinZeleke BelayFounder Leulseged [email protected] EditorHelawi [email protected] DirectionLeulseged TibebuWritersHasset Ahmed ContributorsRahel ShawlLaura FranceschiniPhotographersSami FahmiSolan KifleMarketingEden [email protected]+251 900 57 19 12Special Thanks Ahmad GhaithAbel GebretsadikErmias Teshome Esmelalem ZewdieEyerusalem TesfamariamMichael Getachew Michale HailuPier Paolo ElmiRedwan NesreShewit Yemane Tewodros GelayeYohannes GelayeZerihun Tsige
Printed by Ketema PublishersJournal designed and proofed for print at Ketema JournalCopyright © 2026 Ketema JournalWhile every care is taken to ensure accuracy, the publisher assumes no liability for errors or omissions in this publication. All advertisements are taken in good faith, and the opinions and views contained herein are not necessarily those of the publisher. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage, and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in review.Leulseged TibebuFounder & Art DirectorLaura Franceschini Architect, Partner at Westway [email protected] Shawl ZellekeArchitect Founder, Principal RAAS Architects [email protected]: @RahelShawlWouhib Kebede AligazPrincipal Architect,Wouhib Kebede & Associates [email protected] this issue, we explore Wanchi Eco-Lodge, set within the dramatic landscape of the Wanchi Crater Lake basin west of Addis Ababa, offers a thoughtful exploration of how architecture can respond to place without overwhelming it. Developed as part of Ethiopia’s “Dine for the Nation” initiative, the project reflects a quieter architectural ambition—one centered on belonging rather than spectacle.This issue traces the project’s evolution from the early conceptual work of RAAS Architects to the later design development by Westway Architects. Rather than treating vernacular architecture as aesthetic reference alone, both teams engaged deeply with local building traditions, materials, and cultural practices. The reinterpretation of the traditional tukul dwelling becomes central to the project, transformed through contemporary openings that frame the surrounding landscape while still retaining echoes of its original spatial character.Material choices, local craftsmanship, and minimal landscape intervention reinforce the project’s sensitivity to context. Yet the article also raises a subtle question: can architecture adapted for tourism fully preserve authenticity? At Wanchi, that tension remains visible—and perhaps that is precisely what gives the project its architectural depth.Enjoy!
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news 13Addis Sport ParkPrime Minister Abiy Ahmed has inaugurated the Addis Sports Park, a 5.7-hectare recreational and athletic complex designed to international standards and positioned as part of Ethiopia’s broader urban renewal efforts. Describing the project as a symbol of dignity, public wellness, and modernization, the Prime Minister said the park reflects the government’s vision for a “New Ethiopia.”The facility includes an Olympic-standard swimming pool, professional football, basketball, and tennis courts, an 800-meter running track, children’s playgrounds, and sand pitches. At its center stand 15 statues honoring Ethiopia’s Olympic gold medalists, intended to inspire future generations of athletes.Beyond sports infrastructure, the project also emphasizes community development. The park incorporates 105 commercial shops allocated to residents relocated during construction, along with a public plaza capable of accommodating 3,000 people. Two basement parking levels provide space for 300 vehicles, while landscaped connections to nearby riverside green developments reinforce the project’s environmental ambitions.According to the Prime Minister’s Office, the sports park represents both urban progress and inclusive public space for all citizens.Bishoftu Int. AirportEthiopian Airlines has unveiled plans for the Bishoftu International Airport, a USD 12.5 billion mega-project positioned to become Africa’s largest aviation infrastructure development. Located about 40 kilometers from Addis Ababa at an altitude of 1,910 meters, the new airport is designed to operate alongside Addis Ababa Bole International Airport, which is expected to soon reach its annual capacity of 25 million passengers.The first phase of the Bishoftu International Airport will accommodate 60 million passengers annually, with long-term plans expanding capacity to 110 million passengers. The project is expected to strengthen Ethiopia’s role as a continental aviation hub under the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), while boosting trade, tourism, and regional connectivity.The airport’s design is being led by Zaha Hadid Architects, with consultancy services provided by Dar Al-Handasah Consultants. Sustainability features include solar energy integration, wastewater recycling systems, and preparations for sustainable aviation fuel adoption. Financing will combine equity, development finance institutions, export credit agencies, and international commercial banks.
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18WanchiEco-LodgeWESTWAY Architects RAAS ArchitectsIn a landscape that resists easy answers, the architecture doesn’t pretend to have them. Instead, it adjusts carefully, sometimes tentatively—trying to find its place without taking too much of it.
featured 19About 155 kilometers west of Addis Ababa, the Wanchi Crater Lake basin unfolds with a kind of quiet authority. The terrain is dramatic but not theatrical—steep slopes, dense vegetation, and a lake that seems to hold the entire landscape in suspension. It’s the sort of place where architecture, if it arrives too loudly, risks becoming irrelevant. The Wanchi Eco-Lodge Resort, part of Ethiopia’s “Dine for the Nation” initiative led by Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, appears to take that risk seriously. Rather than impose itself, the project leans toward a more measured ambition: to belong.A Landscape That Sets the Terms
20Reading the GroundThe project began with RAAS Architects, commissioned under a design-build contract by Elmi Olindo Plc to develop the initial concept. Their early work is less about form-making and more about listening—site visits, conversations, and a kind of slow observation that, admittedly, often gets rushed in projects of this scale.The terrain is dramatic but not theatrical—steep slopes, dense vegetation, and a lake that seems to hold the entire landscape in suspension.”
featured 21In Ambo and Wanchi, the team studied local building traditions, particularly the tukul—circular, earthbuilt dwellings capped with conical roofs. But this wasn’t an exercise in nostalgia. What seems to have mattered more were the underlying spatial logics: inwardness, material tactility, and a construction language shaped by available resources.There’s something almost pragmatic in their approach—visiting quarries, examining Ambo stone, and mapping how materials move through local economies. It’s not glamorous work, but it tends to leave a deeper imprint on the architecture.
22The Tukul, Opened UpAt the heart of the design is a reinterpretation of the tukul. Traditionally enclosed and introspective, these structures have been reimagined with large openings toward the landscape. It’s a subtle but consequential shift—from shelter as refuge to shelter as frame.The resort includes a central building for communal functions, a large suite-villa, and 22 lodges ranging from 70 to 90 square meters. Each unit is oriented toward the lake, with generous decks that blur the boundary between interior and exterior. The effect is less about spectacle and more about immersion.From Concept to ConstructionAs the project evolved, design leadership shifted to Westway Architects, a Romebased studio known for its methodical, context-driven work. If RAAS established the project’s conceptual footing, Westway extended it—though not without adapting to a more complex set of conditions.Their process, by their own account, hinges on “following traces.” It’s a phrase that can sound abstract, but here it translates into something tangible: working with local artisans, adjusting designs in response to site realities, and resisting standardized solutions.The terrain itself posed immediate challenges. The site slopes sharply toward the lake, making the placement of structures as much an engineering problem as an architectural one. The solution—carefully anchoring buildings while preserving the natural gradient—feels less like a gesture and more like a negotiation.
featured 23Still, there’s a tension here. Opening the tukul to panoramic views introduces a different spatial logic—one that leans toward tourism rather than tradition. Whether this reinterpretation feels authentic or adapted may depend on where you stand.Opening the tukul toward the landscape transformed the dwelling from a space of enclosure into a frame for immersion.
24Material as MediatorMaterial choices do much of the cultural work. Locally sourced Ambo stone forms much of the exterior cladding, grounding the buildings visually and physically. Plaster surfaces, often decorated by local artists, introduce another layer—ornament that feels embedded rather than applied.Inside, the palette shifts. Imported elements—Italian ceramics, refined lighting—sit alongside locally crafted furniture and textiles. It’s a combination that could easily feel disjointed, but here it seems to land somewhere between restraint and quiet luxury.
featured 25Interestingly, even symbolic elements found their way into the design. Local communities suggested incorporating numerological references—specifically the number five, tied to stages of human life. It’s a small detail, perhaps, but one that hints at a deeper level of engagement.The tukul was not replicated as an artifact of nostalgia, but reinterpreted as a contemporary spatial language rooted in place.
26What emerges at Wanchi is not a singular architectural statement but a layered negotiation between ecology, tourism, and vernacular memory.
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featured 29Between Two WorldsFor Westway Architects, the Wanchi project sits in contrast to their work in Addis Ababa, particularly the BGI Headquarters—a dense, urban building shaped by infrastructure, regulation, and the pressures of a rapidly changing city.Here, the constraints are different. Instead of negotiating traffic flows and urban density, the challenge is ecological and cultural: how to build without leaving too heavy a footprint, how to introduce comfort without erasing context.The firm describes both projects as “pioneering,” though in very different ways. If the BGI Headquarters represents a kind of urban ambition, the eco-lodge leans toward restraint—a quieter, perhaps more uncertain form of experimentation.Material choices do much of the cultural work, grounding the architecture in the textures and construction traditions of Oromia.
30Concept Design: RAAS Architects PlcArchitectural Design: WESTWAY ArchitectsDesign Team: Laura Franceschini,Antonella Petitti, Luca Aureggi, Maurizio Condoluci
featured 31Interior Design: Westway Architects and Theodora BugelStructural Design:Marco Tabodini Main Contractor: Elmi Olindo Contractors PlcLandscape Design: RAAS Architects Plc Photography:Michele Spatari, Sami Fahmi, Ketema JournalOperated by:Ethiopian Skylight Hotel
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34The resort attempts something increasingly rare in hospitality architecture: luxury without spectacle.
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38CATALOGUEOF SOLUTIONSUN-HABITAT’S2026 - 2029
article 39Cities at a CrossroadsUN-Habitat’s Catalogue of Solutions 2026–2029 argues that the future of urban life will depend less on grand masterplans and more on practical, adaptable systems rooted in equity, resilience, and local participation.Published by the United Nations Human Settlements Programme, the Catalogue of Solutions 2026–2029 is less a conventional policy document than a global operating manual for the urban century. Across more than 100 pages, the publication assembles 81 tested tools, frameworks, and implementation strategies aimed at helping governments, planners, and development agencies confront some of the defining pressures shaping contemporary cities: housing shortages, informal urbanization, climate vulnerability, displacement, failing infrastructure, and widening inequality.The scale of the challenge is laid out early and without much optimism. Around 1.1 billion people currently live in slums or informal settlements globally, while another two billion are expected to face similar conditions over the next three decades if current trajectories continue. Housing, the report insists, is no longer simply a social issue or a real-estate concern—it has become the central infrastructure of economic stability, climate resilience, health, and social cohesion.Rather than offering visionary rhetoric alone, the catalogue is structured around actionable systems. Organized into three broad sections—strategic focus areas, impact areas, and implementation mechanisms—the document maps how urban challenges intersect with land governance, infrastructure, finance, planning, participation, and data systems.One of the publication’s more compelling qualities is its refusal to treat urbanization as a singular problem with universal solutions. Instead, it emphasizes adaptable methodologies tested across very different contexts—from post-conflict Iraq and Syria to informal settlements in Nairobi, climatevulnerable coastal regions, and rapidly expanding metropolitan areas in Latin America and Asia. The result is a catalogue that reads partly like a toolkit and partly like a record of institutional learning.
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article 41Housing and land governance form the backbone of the report. Several featured solutions focus on securing land tenure, preventing forced evictions, and improving access to affordable housing through participatory and data-driven approaches. In particular, the Social Tenure Domain Model (STDM)—a low-cost, opensource land information system—emerges as one of the report’s recurring instruments. Designed to map and document land relationships even in informal or legally ambiguous contexts, the system has already been deployed in countries including Zambia, Nepal, Iraq, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.The catalogue also pays significant attention to informal settlements, though notably with less emphasis on demolition and replacement than on incremental upgrading. Community mapping, in-situ upgrading, and participatory planning are repeatedly positioned as alternatives to top-down redevelopment models that often displace vulnerable residents. That shift reflects a broader evolution in international urban policy over the past two decades: from viewing informal settlements as urban failures to recognizing them as complex social and economic systems requiring integration rather than erasure.Climate adaptation appears throughout the publication not as a standalone environmental issue but as an urban management challenge embedded in land use, infrastructure, mobility, and public space. Solutions range from sustainable transport planning and energy-efficient buildings to ecological asset protection and territorial climate-risk diagnostics. What becomes clear is that resilience, in UN-Habitat’s framing, is increasingly inseparable from governance capacity.There is also a noticeable emphasis on participation. Initiatives such as Block-by-Block, Her City Toolbox, and youth-focused urban resource centers suggest a growing institutional recognition that urban planning can no longer operate solely through centralized expertise. Whether these participatory models meaningfully redistribute power is perhaps still open to debate, but the report argues strongly for co-creation as both a planning method and a social process.At times, the catalogue’s bureaucratic language and extensive use of development terminology can feel dense. Acronyms accumulate quickly, and the publication occasionally leans heavily on institutional frameworks and indicators. Yet beneath that technical structure lies a surprisingly coherent argument: cities cannot solve housing, inequality, or climate vulnerability in isolation. Urban systems are interconnected, and interventions must operate across governance, finance, infrastructure, ecology, and community life simultaneously.For architects and urban practitioners, the publication offers an interesting shift in perspective. Buildings alone are largely absent from the conversation. Instead, architecture is positioned within wider systems of land, infrastructure, social policy, and environmental management. The emphasis is less on iconic projects and more on long-term urban capacity.In that sense, the Catalogue of Solutions 2026–2029 reflects a broader transformation in how global institutions now imagine urban futures. The question is no longer simply how to build more cities, but how to make rapidly expanding urban environments more equitable, resilient, and governable under increasingly unstable conditions.Whether these solutions can move from pilot frameworks into meaningful large-scale implementation remains uncertain. Still, the document offers a useful snapshot of where international urban thinking currently stands: pragmatic, data-driven, deeply concerned with inequality, and increasingly aware that the future of cities may depend as much on social systems as on physical form.
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