Plastic bottles filled with shredded packaging, wrappers, and other waste materials lined up on a ledge.

Eco-brick by eco-brick, Interactors in Peru learn the magic of Rotary

Interactors in Peru learn the magic of Rotary by turning recycled materials into eco‑bricks while building leadership, teamwork, and service skills

01 Aug 2025

Photography by Monika Lozinska

As Raquel Lozano Fernández explained, the mission was twofold. The 2024-25 president of the Rotary Club of Lima, Peru, Lozano is also the adviser for the Interact Club of Abraham Valdelomar, which is sponsored by the Lima club. Under the guidance of Lozano and other Rotarians, the Interactors embarked on an ambitious project to transform plastic bottles and other recyclable materials into eco-bricks. The bricks were then used to create tables and chairs for the Bellavista school in Independencia, a municipality north of Lima’s city center.

 

Britani Alejos Cucho, a student at Bellavista school, holding a plastic bottle filled with waste materials, with similar bottles displayed on shelves in the background.

Britani Alejos Cucho, a student at Bellavista school, compresses scraps of plastic into a recycled plastic bottle to create an eco-brick. The eco-bricks will later be used to make tables and chairs for the school.


Two people loading plastic bottles filled with waste materials beside a blue vehicle parked along a sidewalk.

The completed eco-bricks are prepared for the furniture-building phase of the project.


As part of the project, the Interactors included the Bellavista students in crafting the eco-brick furniture, thereby providing a useful lesson in environmental sustainability. But that was only one facet of the project. Under the guise of la gincana — connection-based games, songs, and activities — the Interactors also conducted social-emotional workshops with the younger students, thereby picking up lessons in leadership and confidence building along the way.

Narrow street lined with buildings and utility wires; two people displaying plastic bottles filled with waste materials.

Left: The Bellavista school is in Independencia, a municipality north of the city center of Lima, Peru. Right: Interactors Camila Velazquez Castilla and Joaquin Camacho Solis show off a chair constructed from the eco-bricks.


Lozano (in cap) explains the next phase of the process to a group of students and Interactors.

Lozano (in cap) explains the next phase of the process to the students and Interactors.


Interactors and adults waving outside a building with a sign reading "CELEBREMOS Y RESPETEMOS DERECHOS".

On the steps of the Bellavista school, Rotarians, Interactors, and students display the fruits of their labor — and their newly acquired sense of camaraderie.


As for the relationship between the older and younger students, the Rotary staff duo report that the kids were all happily, well, “interacting.” Mission accomplished.

This story originally appeared in the August 2025 issue of Rotary magazine.

Raquel Lozano Fernández hugs Romina Abigail Solia (left) and Valeria Reymundo Zabrano posing together outdoors, including two people wearing blue vests with visible logos and text.

Raquel Lozano Fernández hugs Romina Abigail Solia (left) and Valeria Reymundo Zabrano, two of the Interactors participating in the eco-brick project and the social-emotional workshops at the Bellavista school.


Interact clubs bring together young people ages 12-18 to develop leadership skills while discovering the power of Service Above Self. 

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