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Global Fundraising 2025-2050

AGUNDIZ DESIGN INC🌍 Global Campaign 2025-2050 Launches to Build 2,500 Climate‑Controlled Humanitarian Homes in San Luis Potosí, Mexico 
San Luis Potosí, Mexico 2025 A global humanitarian fundraising effort has been launched to address one of the most urgent challenges facing vulnerable communities in Mexico: the convergence of extreme poverty and accelerating climate change. 
The initiative calls on 50 million people worldwide to contribute just $1 each, collectively raising $50 million USD to build 2,500 climate‑controlled Thermobloc homes for families living in high‑risk conditions.
Led by Agundiz Design Inc under the supervision of Jose Cruz Agundiz Villela, the 25‑year mission aims to provide dignified, resilient, and healthy housing for communities disproportionately affected by environmental and socioeconomic vulnerability.

💛 How to Contribute

A global act of compassion begins with a single dollar.

Donate via PayPal:  

[email protected]

Contact:  

Jose Cruz Agundiz  

[email protected]  

More Information:  

- https://wp.me/pgvvun-3k  

- https://agundizinc.simdif.com/  

- http://jagundiz.wordpress.com/  


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© 2025 Agundiz Design Inc.  All rights reserved.  No part of this document may be reproduced without written authorization from the author.
This document is part of the ThermoBloc Humanitarian Housing Initiative, a social impact project designed to improve living conditions for vulnerable families in San Luis Potosí, Mexico.
The Humanitarian Aid Campaign is an international initiative led by Agundiz Design Inc., dedicated to designing and constructing climate‑controlled, resilient housing for families living in conditions of extreme vulnerability. Its purpose is to protect life, restore dignity, and strengthen communities through accessible, sustainable, and human‑centered architectural solutions.  The campaign integrates principles of social justice, solidarity, and collective responsibility, promoting coordinated actions that transform unsafe environments into livable, healthy, and dignified spaces.
❤️ Dedication
To the families who have endured more than any human being should.  To the children who dream of a safe place.  To the mothers who fight without rest.  To the fathers who never give up.  To the grandparents who have survived heat, storms, and neglect.
This is for you.  This movement is for you.  This future will be built with you.
Acknowledgments
To everyone who believed in this vision.  To those who donated a dollar, a word, a gesture.  To those who shared this mission with the world.  To the engineers, architects, volunteers, and community leaders who put their hands and hearts into every step.
To the community of San Luis Potosí, for its strength, dignity, and hope.
And to you, reader, for being here.  Your presence is already part of the change.
Table of Contents
1. Executive Summary  2. Project Origin & Humanitarian Motivation  3. The Housing Crisis in San Luis Potosí  4. Mission & Vision  5. Why ThermoBloc Matters  6. What Is ThermoBloc?  7. ThermoHome Housing Models  8. Financial Model  9. Implementation Timeline (2025–2050)  10. Projected Impact  11. Governance & Transparency  12. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)  13. Final Call to Action & Closing Words  Epilogue  Final Credits  
1. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 
Humanitarian Aid Campaign A Housing Community Initiative 2025-2050 San Luis Potosí, Mexico25‑year project designed to build 2,500 climate‑controlled homes for families living in extreme poverty in San Luis Potosí, Mexico. This report presents the vision, financial model, technology, expected impact, and global call to action based on the solidarity of a single dollar.A World Where a Dollar Can Change a Life.
Every morning in San Luis Potosí, the sun rises with a merciless heat that seeps into the walls of fragile homes.Inside those homes, children wake up drenched in sweat, their small bodies fighting temperatures that no human should endure.Every night, mothers lie awake listening to the wind, praying that the next storm will not tear their roofs away.They pray not for comfort — but for survival.This is not a distant tragedy.This is happening now, in our world, to families who did nothing to deserve such suffering. And yet, hope exists.Hope exists in the form of a single dollar.A dollar that becomes a brick.A brick that becomes a wall.A wall that becomes a home.A home that becomes a future.
We are calling on 50 million people around the world to give $1 — not because $1 is much, but because together, $1 becomes everything.$1 = 1 act of global compassion 50,000,000 donors × $1 = $50,000,000 raised $20,000 USD fully funds one 
ThermoBloc climate‑controlled homeWith this, we will build 2,500 homes for families living in extreme vulnerability.Homes that protect.Homes that cool.Homes that heal.Homes that restore dignity.This book is not just a proposal.It is a human story — a story of suffering, resilience, and hope.It is a call to every person who believes that compassion is stronger than climate, stronger than poverty, stronger than despair.This is your invitation to be part of something extraordinary.Your dollar becomes a brick of hope.Your compassion becomes a home.Your kindness becomes a future.
 2 Origin of the Project and Humanitarian MotivationExteriors Built for ResilienceStrong Foundations Against Adversity
For nearly three decades, Agundiz Design Inc. has worked in vulnerable communities where extreme heat, poverty, and lack of basic infrastructure affect health, dignity, and daily life. Humanitarian Aid Campaign was created as a direct response to this reality: a humanitarian solution built on engineering, compassion, and climate justice.
Exteriors Built for ResilienceStrong Foundations Against Adversity
Our exterior construction projects arise from an unwavering principle: resilience. Every undertaking is designed to confront the realities of climate, environment, and the socioeconomic constraints that affect communities. Building walls is not our only goal; we create shelters that protect lives and enable recovery after hardship.
We work on both rebuilding homes after disasters and installing essential sanitation systems, always prioritizing durability and sustainability. Our technical and human criteria combine to deliver solutions that endure and reduce families’ vulnerability.
- Disaster‑resilient housing: Structures engineered to withstand floods, earthquakes, and extreme weather.  - Essential infrastructure: Clean water systems, sanitation facilities, and community services that improve public health.  - Sustainable practices: Use of locally sourced stone and brick, eco‑friendly cement, and low‑impact construction methods.  
Exteriors are protective barriers: more than architectural elements, they are instruments to preserve people’s dignity and safety.
Driving ChangeDonations for Energy‑Efficient Community Development
The need for sustainable, energy‑efficient community development is urgent. Low‑income families often face the harshest conditions: unsafe housing, lack of access to clean water, and inadequate basic services. Humanitarian Aid Campaign was born as a practical, humane response to this reality.
Donating to community development projects focused on energy efficiency not only reduces long‑term costs but also improves health, safety, and community resilience. Well‑designed interventions yield tangible benefits: lower energy consumption, healthier indoor environments, and greater capacity to recover from disasters.
Agundiz Design Inc. and the Humanitarian Trajectory
Agundiz Design Inc., founded in 1995 by José Cruz Agundiz, has devoted decades to construction with social purpose. The organization blends technical expertise with humanitarian commitment to transform vulnerable environments into safe, sustainable spaces.
Key areas of work include:
- Providing dignified housing solutions tailored to local needs.  - Delivering humanitarian aid in emergency and post‑emergency contexts.  - Building resilient, sustainable homes that reduce risk and operating costs.  - Improving health and environmental conditions through appropriate infrastructure.  - Empowering vulnerable families via technical support, training, and long‑term accompaniment.  
The experience accumulated since 1995 supports an integrated approach: design, execution, and community strengthening.
Community Focus and Local Practices
We believe lasting solutions are built from within the community. That is why we prioritize:
- Local materials that support the regional economy and reduce environmental footprint.  - Locally trained labor to ensure maintenance and continuity.  - Designs adapted to climatic and cultural contexts that maximize comfort and efficiency.  
This approach multiplies impact: each project not only improves a dwelling but also strengthens skills, creates jobs, and promotes autonomy.
Vision and Commitment
Agundiz Design Inc; envisions a future where every family lives with dignity. That vision rests on the conviction that kindness, technical skill, and commitment can transform entire communities. Our work aims not only to repair what is broken but to build the conditions for people to thrive.
By investing in energy‑efficient community development and resilient construction, donors and partners contribute to sustainable change: safer homes, stronger communities, and a fairer environment for future generations.
Closing
This chapter outlines the origin and humanitarian motivation behind our work: a blend of technical experience, social sensitivity, and commitment to sustainability. Each project is an opportunity to protect lives, restore hope, and lay the foundations for resilient communities.
3. The Housing Crisis in San Luis Potosí
Thousands of families live in improvised structures that offer no protection from heat, humidity, or storms. Indoor temperatures can exceed 45°C (113°F), causing respiratory illness, heat stress, and inhumane living conditions. Lack of dignified housing perpetuates cycles of poverty and vulnerability.
Lead paragraph  San Luis Potosí faces a compounded crisis: entrenched poverty layered with accelerating climate hazards. The result is a systemic housing emergency that undermines health, livelihoods, and social stability. Humanitarian Aid Campaign argets this nexus with interventions that are technical, social, and rights‑based.
3.1 Pre‑Existing Social VulnerabilityMany households live in precarious conditions that magnify disaster risk and health exposure.
Typical conditions  - Improvised homes built without formal plans or durable materials.  - Extreme poverty that prevents maintenance or upgrades.  - Unsafe structures with inadequate foundations, poor roofing, and weak connections.  - Lack of sanitation and basic services that increase disease burden and reduce resilience.
Social consequences  These conditions limit children’s education, increase healthcare costs, and trap families in cycles of debt and displacement.
3.2 Climate Vulnerability in MexicoClimate change is already reshaping risk profiles across Mexico. San Luis Potosí experiences more frequent and intense heatwaves, heavier rainfall events, and unpredictable temperature swings.
Observed impacts  - Heat extremes that increase heat‑related illness and reduce productivity.  - Flooding and storm damage that destroy homes and contaminate water supplies.  - Material stress from thermal cycling that accelerates structural deterioration.
Scale of the problem  Millions live in substandard housing lacking thermal protection, sanitation, and structural safety, making them disproportionately vulnerable to climate shocks.
3.3 The Double BurdenPoverty and climate stress are mutually reinforcing.
Mechanisms of the cycle  - Weak housing suffers disproportionate damage during climate events.  - Climate events erode livelihoods and savings, reducing capacity to repair or rebuild.  - Service gaps (water, sanitation, health) amplify illness and economic loss.
Cycle summary  Poverty → Weak housing→ Climate damage → More poverty
3.4 Human ImpactThe human toll is immediate and measurable.
Primary consequences  - Heat‑related illness and chronic health impacts.  - Displacement and repeated loss of shelter.  - Structural collapse with injury and fatalities.  - Food insecurity as agricultural and informal incomes are disrupted.
Vulnerable groups  Women, children, older adults, and people with disabilities face heightened risk and reduced access to recovery resources.
3.5 Housing as Social JusticeAdequate housing is a human right that must integrate health, safety, resilience, and dignity.
Standards and principles  - Health: access to sanitation, clean water, and thermal comfort.  - Safety: structural resilience to foreseeable hazards.  - Resilience: capacity to absorb shocks and recover quickly.  - Dignity: privacy, habitability, and cultural appropriateness.
ThermoBloc as intervention  ThermoBloc is a structural humanitarian intervention that combines passive thermal design, resilient construction details, and community engagement to break the cycle of poverty and climate vulnerability.
4. Mission & Vision
Mission: Build safe, cool, and resilient homes for vulnerable families through a sustainable humanitarian model.  Vision: Communities where dignity, health, and safety are guaranteed rights — not privileges.
Mission Born From HumanitySome missions are drafted in boardrooms. This one was born in the field — in the heat, in the dust, in the quiet places where people live without protection. Humanitarian Aid Campaign: mission began the day we stopped counting statistics and started listening to stories: a child trying to sleep on a concrete floor that burned at night, a mother who sleeps with one ear on the wind because she fears the next storm, an elder who asks only for a home that does not hurt them. These are not construction problems. These are life‑and‑death realities. Our mission is to protect life.
Vision Rooted in DignityYour blog captured the truth simply and beautifully: “A future where all families can live in dignity, where kindness and commitment create thriving communities.” That sentence is the compass for everything we do. Imagine a world where no child wakes sweating from heat, where no mother counts the hours until the next storm, where poverty does not erase a family’s right to safety. This is not an architectural plan. This is a promise: dignity for every household, safety for every child, and respect for every life.
The Founder’s PurposeAt the heart of this movement stands one person who refused to look away: Jose Cruz Agundiz Villela — builder, visionary, humanitarian, founder of Agundiz Design Inc. Housing Community He did not discover this crisis from a report. He walked into the homes others ignore, sat with the families others pass by, and felt the heat and fear they endure. From those visits came a vow: to fight for those who cannot fight alone. That vow is the engine of Humanitarian Aid Campaign 
Compassion in ActionCompassion is not sentiment. Compassion is responsibility. It demands work, design, and persistence. Our mission is clear and actionable: to build climate‑controlled, resilient homes for families living in extreme vulnerability. These homes will cool, protect, and heal. They will restore dignity and create the conditions for health, education, and hope. This is not charity. This is justice enacted through design and solidarity.
A Vision That Extends Beyond WallsA home is more than shelter. A home is the foundation of a life. When a child can sleep without fear, when a mother can rest, when a father can plan, a family begins to rebuild. 
Humanitarian Aid Campaign: vision reaches beyond individual houses to entire communities: safer streets, healthier children, stronger local economies, and renewed civic pride. We build not only walls but the conditions for thriving.
A Future We Build TogetherThis chapter is not a manifesto for one organization. It is an invitation to everyone who believes in humanity. Every dollar, every hour of volunteer work, every shared story becomes part of a collective promise: homes that are safe, communities that are strong, families that are protected, and compassion that becomes action
5. Why ThermoBloc Matters
Thermo‑Block Technology: A Breakthrough in Climate‑Resilient HousingAgundiz Design Inc. is pioneering a new era in humanitarian construction through its Thermo‑Block Technology, a patented system engineered to protect vulnerable families from extreme heat, mold, and structural deterioration.
Key Advantages- Heat‑resistant, mold‑proof, and energy‑efficient  - Reduces dependence on air conditioning, lowering emissions and utility costs  - Patent‑protected and globally scalable, adaptable to diverse climates and terrains  
This innovation positions Agundiz Design Inc. as a leader in climate‑adaptive housing solutions for low‑income communities.
Learn more about Thermo‑Block Technology or explore Climate‑Resilient Housing.
Revolutionizing Low‑Income Housing in Mexico
At the forefront of humanitarian aid and community development, Agundiz Design Inc. — led by visionary founder José Cruz Agundiz — is transforming the future of housing for low‑income families across Mexico.
Through the Humanitarian Aid Campaign Mexico, the organization is constructing resilient, climate‑controlled homes using advanced Thermo‑Block concrete systems.
These homes provide:
- Stable indoor temperatures  - Improved respiratory health  - Protection from extreme heat and storms  - Long‑term structural durability  
Explore ThermoHome Models or Housing Crisis in Mexico.
A Collaborative Model for Sustainable Impact
The driving force behind this initiative is a belief in shared responsibility and collective investment.
Agundiz Design Inc. integrates:
- Investment partnerships  - Bank financing  - Community participation  - Donor contributions  
This blended model ensures long‑term sustainability and scalable impact.
Learn about Funding Models or Community Participation.
Advocating for Policy and Structural Change
Beyond construction, the organization champions systemic solutions:
- Housing policy reform  - Rental assistance programs  - Community development initiatives  - Climate‑resilient urban planning  
By highlighting the health and economic consequences of inadequate housing, Agundiz Design Inc. positions itself as a catalyst for national and global change.
Explore Policy Solutions or Economic Impact of Poor Housing.
Digest Summary
Agundiz Design Inc. is not just building homes — it is building a new humanitarian standard through:
- Innovation (Thermo‑Block Technology)  - Resilience (climate‑controlled housing)  - Collaboration (partners, banks, donors, communities)  - Advocacy (policy, health, economic reform) as a global‑ready model for sustainable, climate‑resilient housing.

 6 — What Is ThermoBloc?
A block that carries the weight of human hope
ThermoBloc is not just a construction material.  It is a response to suffering.  It is a shield against climate injustice.  It is a lifeline for families who have endured far more than any human being should.
ThermoBloc was born because traditional housing was failing the very people who needed protection the most.  Homes that trapped unbearable heat.  Homes that collapsed during storms.  Homes that made families sick.  Homes that stripped dignity instead of giving it.
ThermoBloc emerged from a simple but powerful truth:
> A home should never harm the people who live inside it.
Learn more about Climate Justice or Housing Vulnerability.
Engineering with a human purpose
Every ThermoBloc is designed with intention — not only technical, but profoundly human.
It is created to:- Keep homes cool during deadly heatwaves  - Protect against storms and flooding  - Reduce illnesses caused by extreme temperatures  - Create a healthy, breathable indoor environment  - Provide real structural safety  
But behind every technical feature, there is a human story.
Insulation means a child can sleep.  Ventilation means an elderly person can breathe.  Structural strength means a family will not lose their home again.
This is not engineering for the market.  This is engineering for humanity.
Explore Thermal Insulation Benefits or Human‑Centered Engineering.
The science of safety, the heart of compassion
ThermoBloc is made with:
- Thermal insulation that drastically reduces indoor temperatures  - Materials that resist storms, humidity, and structural stress  - Eco‑friendly components that protect the environment  - A design that reduces energy consumption  - A structure built to last for generations  
But science is only half the story.
The other half is compassion.
Your blog expresses it clearly:
> “Improving lives through resilient homes. Sustainable and responsible construction.”
ThermoBloc is the physical expression of that promise.
Learn more about Sustainable Construction.
A home that breathes, protects, and heals
A ThermoBloc home is not only cooler — it is healthier.
Inside these homes:
- Children breathe better  - Elderly residents feel relief  - Families sleep peacefully  - Stress decreases  - Illnesses decline  - Hope grows  
A home becomes a sanctuary —  a place where the climate cannot harm, where poverty cannot suffocate, where fear cannot enter.
Your blog says it with strength:
> “These homes are designed to offer quality, safety, and climate control to those who need it most.”
This is not luxury.  This is survival.  This is dignity.  This is justice.
Explore Health Benefits of Climate‑Controlled Housing.
Why ThermoBloc is different
Traditional construction fails vulnerable families because it was never designed for them.  It was designed for speed, for cost, for convenience.
ThermoBloc is different because it was designed for:
- The mother who cannot sleep because the heat suffocates her children  - The father who rebuilds his home every year after storms  - The grandmother who fears the next heatwave  - The child who dreams of a safe place to grow  
ThermoBloc is not just a material.  It is a mission.
A mission to protect.  A mission to heal.  A mission to restore dignity.
Learn more about Resilient Housing Design.
A block that builds more than houses
When you build with ThermoBloc, you are not just raising walls.  You are building:
- Health  - Safety  - Stability  - Opportunity  - Community  - Hope  
Your blog expresses it beautifully:
> “We seek to address root causes, alleviate poverty, improve health, protect the environment, and empower affected families.”
ThermoBloc is the tool that makes that vision real.
Explore Community Empowerment.
A future built block by block
ThermoBloc is more than an innovation in construction.  It is a humanitarian breakthrough.
A block that cools.  A block that protects.  A block that heals.  A block that empowers.  A block that changes lives.
This is the heart of ThermoBloc:
> A block designed with compassion.  A home built with dignity.  A future created with hope.
 7. ThermoHome Housing Models
Deep Humanitarian Emotional Rewrite — Rooted in the Agundiz Design Inc. Housing Aid Campaign, San Luis Potosí, México
A Home Is More Than Walls — It Is a Place Where Life Begins Again
When a family receives a ThermoHome, they are not simply receiving a structure.  They are receiving a new beginning.
For families who have lived in fear of heat, storms, and collapsing roofs, stepping into a Thermo Resilience Home feels like stepping into a different world — a world where the air is cooler, the walls are stronger, and the future finally feels possible.
The Humanitarian Housing Aid Campaign of San Luis Potosí, México, led by Agundiz Design Inc., defines these homes as:
> Climate‑controlled, dignified, and resilient housing designed for families living in extreme vulnerability.
This is not construction.  This is restoration.
The Heart of the Home: A Space That Protects and Heals
Every ThermoHome model is designed with one purpose:
To protect the family living inside.
Not only from climate.  Not only from storms.  But from the emotional weight of poverty, fear, and instability.
A ThermoHome is:
- Cool during heatwaves  - Safe during storms  - Quiet during chaos  - Strong during uncertainty  - Peaceful during stress  
It is a home that finally allows a family to rest.
This aligns with the core mission of the Agundiz Design Inc. Humanitarian Housing Initiative:  to build homes that heal, protect, and restore dignity.
The Standard ThermoHome Model — A Sanctuary for Vulnerable Families
1. Two Bedrooms — Where Dreams Can Finally Grow
In many low‑income homes, children sleep on the floor, sharing cramped spaces with siblings, parents, or extended family.
But in a ThermoHome:
- Children have a room where they can dream  - Parents have a space where they can rest  - Privacy becomes possible  - Dignity returns  
A bedroom is not just a room.  It is a place where a child can imagine a future.
2. A Living Area — Where Families Become Families Again
In fragile homes, families often gather outside because the inside is too hot, too dark, or too unsafe.
But in a ThermoHome:
- The living area is cool  - The air is breathable  - The space is safe  - Families can sit together without fear  
This is where stories return.  Where laughter returns.  Where healing begins.
3. A Kitchen — Where Nourishment Meets Dignity
In many vulnerable homes, cooking is done over open flames, in unsafe spaces, or in extreme heat.
But in a ThermoHome:
- The kitchen is ventilated  - The heat is controlled  - The environment is safe  - Mothers can cook without risking their health  
A kitchen is not just a place to prepare food.  It is a place where a mother can care for her family without suffering.
4. A Bathroom — A Basic Human Right Restored
The Humanitarian Housing Aid Campaign emphasizes dignity, health, and safety — and sanitation is at the core of all three.
In a ThermoHome:
- Families have access to clean sanitation  - Children grow up healthier  - Disease decreases  - Dignity increases  
A bathroom is not a luxury.  It is a human right.
The Architecture of Compassion
Every ThermoHome model includes:
- Cross ventilation — so families can breathe  - Thermal insulation — so children can sleep  - Structural strength — so storms cannot destroy their lives  - Eco‑friendly materials — so the environment is protected  - Modular design — so families can grow  
This is not architecture for profit.  This is architecture for humanity.
It reflects the foundational values of Agundiz Design Inc.:  resilience, compassion, and climate‑adaptive innovation.
Optional Upgrades — Because Every Family Deserves More Than the Minimum
For communities with additional support, ThermoHomes can include:
- Solar panels — reducing energy costs  - Rainwater harvesting — increasing water security  - Modular expansion — allowing families to grow  - Community gardens — improving nutrition and unity  
These upgrades are not luxuries.  They are investments in dignity.
A Home That Changes Everything
When a family receives a ThermoHome:
- Children sleep through the night  - Mothers breathe easier  - Fathers feel hope  - Grandparents feel safe  - Families feel human again  
This is the mission of the Humanitarian Housing Aid Campaign of San Luis Potosí:
> To improve the well‑being of vulnerable communities through resilient, climate‑controlled housing.
And that is exactly what a ThermoHome does.
It makes a difference.  A real difference.  A life‑changing difference.
A Home Is the First Step Toward a Better Future
A ThermoHome is not the end of the journey.  It is the beginning.
The beginning of:
- Health  - Stability  - Education  - Opportunity  - Community  - Hope  
This is why ThermoHome models matter.  This is why ThermoBloc matters.  This is why your mission matters.
Because a home is not just a place to live.  It is a place to become.
8. Financial Model
Deep Humanitarian Emotional Rooted in the Agundiz Design Inc. Housing Aid Campaign, San Luis Potosí, México
A Movement Built on the Power of One Dollar
Most humanitarian projects depend on large donations.  Most rely on wealthy donors, corporations, or governments.
But the ThermoBloc Humanitarian Housing Initiative is different.
It is built on a simple, revolutionary belief:
> Every person in the world has the power to change a life — even with just $1.
One dollar.  A coin forgotten in a pocket.  An amount many people spend without thinking.
But in the hands of compassion,  $1 becomes a brick of hope.
And when millions of people give $1, something extraordinary happens:

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