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Kampung Kampus: Fighting Apathy Through Community-Led Regeneration
Singapore Community Building, Climate Action, Circular Economy, Biodiversity, Education
Project Story
At a time when the climate crisis, biodiversity loss, and social polarization are accelerating, one of the greatest challenges facing our cities is not a lack of solutions—it is apathy.
Many people know about environmental problems, yet feel disconnected from them. Sustainability has become something that happens somewhere else, carried out by experts, governments, or corporations. As cities become denser and lives become busier, people increasingly lose opportunities to shape the places they live in, resulting in a growing crisis of disconnection—from nature, from one another, and from a sense of agency.
Ground-Up Initiative (GUI) exists to fight this apathy.
Rather than simply teaching people about sustainability, we invite them to physically build it with their own hands.
Today, we are developing Kampung Kampus, a 1.3-hectare community-built campus in Singapore. Built largely from rescued and upcycled materials, Kampung Kampus is both a living demonstration of circularity and a platform where people can come together to regenerate land, restore biodiversity, strengthen community ties, and rediscover their ability to make a difference.
Every pathway, structure, garden, compost system, and habitat tells a story—not of what was purchased, but of what was collectively built.
Funds raised through this campaign will directly support the completion of Kampung Kampus, allowing us to continue transforming a once-degraded site into a thriving community space that reconnects people with Earth, others, and self.
Our Mission
Ground-Up Initiative believes that meaningful environmental change begins with participation.
Our mission is to nurture grounded, gracious, green, giving, and grateful communities by creating opportunities for people to actively contribute to the places they inhabit.
We believe that people protect what they help create.
Through hands-on experiences in waste transformation, biodiversity restoration, regenerative land stewardship, and community building, we empower individuals to move from passive consumers of sustainability to active stewards of their environment.
Kampung Kampus is designed not just as a destination, but as a process—one where thousands of people contribute to building a shared future together.
Background & Problem Statement
Singapore, like many global cities, faces a dual challenge.
The first is environmental. Rising temperatures, biodiversity loss, resource depletion, and increasing waste generation place growing pressure on urban ecosystems.
The second is social. As cities become increasingly efficient and digitized, opportunities for meaningful participation and belonging are diminishing. Many people feel disconnected from their neighbours, their communities, and the natural systems that sustain them.
These challenges reinforce one another.
When people feel disconnected, environmental issues feel distant and abstract. When environmental degradation accelerates, communities become more vulnerable and fragmented.
After 16 years at our former home, GUI was required to relocate in 2025. Our new site arrived with its own challenges. The land had been heavily engineered and topped up with approximately five metres of clay, leaving behind a barren landscape with poor soil quality, limited biodiversity, and little ecological value.
Rather than seeing this as a setback, we saw an opportunity to demonstrate what community-led regeneration can achieve.
Our Solution
Kampung Kampus is a living experiment in regenerative urbanism.
Instead of relying solely on contractors and capital, we invite citizens, schools, volunteers, companies, and partners to participate directly in rebuilding the land.
People help transform waste materials into infrastructure.
They compost food waste into fertile soil.
They plant trees and native species.
They restore habitats.
They build furniture, pathways, gardens, and gathering spaces.
Through these acts, sustainability becomes tangible, social, and deeply personal.
Over time, the land itself becomes a teacher, showing visitors how collective action can restore degraded environments while simultaneously strengthening community bonds.
Our work is guided by three interconnected pillars:
Waste to Build
Transforming discarded materials into useful infrastructure, reducing waste while demonstrating practical circular economy solutions.
Farm Our Heart
Using gardening, composting, cooking, and shared meals to cultivate empathy, resilience, and a sense of belonging.
Biodiversity
Restoring ecological function through habitat creation, native planting, soil regeneration, and nature-based learning.
Together, these pillars create an ecosystem where environmental restoration and social regeneration happen simultaneously.
Opportunity
Kampung Kampus represents a new model for cities.
While many sustainability projects focus on technology, infrastructure, or awareness campaigns, few create opportunities for people to physically participate in shaping their environment.
This project demonstrates how underutilized urban land can become a platform for education, community building, ecological restoration, and climate action.
Every year, thousands of students, volunteers, families, corporate teams, and community groups visit GUI to learn through action.
As Kampung Kampus grows, it will serve as a living laboratory where visitors can explore:
By sharing our methods, successes, and failures openly, we hope to inspire similar community-led regeneration projects in cities around the world.
How We Regenerate
Regeneration at GUI begins with participation.
Our approach combines:
Unlike many environmental projects where people are observers, participants at GUI become co-creators.
The process of building together is as important as the physical outcomes themselves.
Use of Funds
Funding received will directly support:
Completing Kampung Kampus
Construction of educational, workshop, and community spaces that allow us to welcome more visitors and programmes.
Ecological Restoration
Soil improvement, habitat creation, native planting, and biodiversity enhancement across the site.
Community Participation Programmes
Supporting volunteer engagement, school programmes, community events, and hands-on learning experiences.
Circular Economy Infrastructure
Developing systems that demonstrate how waste can be transformed into valuable resources and building materials.
Long-Term Sustainability
Creating income-generating educational and community facilities that allow the campus to remain financially resilient while serving the public.
Tracking Impact
We believe that regeneration should be measurable.
Our impact tracking includes:
Environmental Indicators
Community Indicators
Qualitative Outcomes
Beyond numbers, we document stories of transformation, belonging, confidence, and stewardship.
We measure not only what is built, but also how people change through the process of building together.
Our Experience
Ground-Up Initiative has spent nearly two decades building communities through environmental action.
What began as a small volunteer-led initiative has grown into one of Singapore’s most recognised community sustainability organisations.
Over the years, GUI has engaged more than 200,000 people through environmental education, volunteerism, community programmes, and regenerative land stewardship.
Our work spans:
Most importantly, we have demonstrated that ordinary people, when given the opportunity, are willing and able to contribute meaningfully to environmental regeneration.
Kampung Kampus is the next chapter of this journey.
The land we are building is more than a campus. It is a proof of concept that communities can come together to regenerate both ecosystems and human relationships.
In a world increasingly defined by division, isolation, and environmental decline, we believe the most powerful antidote is participation.
By fighting apathy and creating opportunities for people to build together, we are helping cultivate a future where both people and planet can thrive.
Evidence and reviews live on the open ATProto network and can be inspected by anyone.