Skip to main content

Pilosio runs landmark peace awards event in Venice

Formwork firm Pilosio is taking corporate responsibility and sustainability very seriously indeed through its peace awards - Kristina Smith reports Italian formwork specialist Pilosio held its fourth annual Building Peace Award in the historic setting of Venice’s Scuola Grande on Friday 12th September. This year’s winner was politician Samia Yaba Nkrumah, the daughter of Ghana’s first democratically elected president, highlighting her planned project to build a new library and learning space in Akosombo, ne
November 21, 2014 Read time: 3 mins

Formwork firm Pilosio is taking corporate responsibility and sustainability very seriously indeed through its peace awards - Kristina Smith reports

Italian formwork specialist 7163 Pilosio held its fourth annual Building Peace Award in the historic setting of Venice’s Scuola Grande on Friday 12th September. This year’s winner was politician Samia Yaba Nkrumah, the daughter of Ghana’s first democratically elected president, highlighting her planned project to build a new library and learning space in Akosombo, near Lake Volta, dedicated to her father.

Over 300 guests from around the world, including 150 Pilosio clients, attended the event and heard keynote speaker Kofi Annan, former secretary-general of the United Nations, speak about the event’s theme: ‘Women as builders of Peace’. Annan also outlined the importance of corporate social responsibility and the need for the public and private sectors to work together:

“Given the problems we face, we cannot rely on governments to deal with it,” he said. “We need the private sector, civil society and we need foundations.”

Pilosio’s Building Peace Awards demonstrate a more direct approach to communicating and networking with clients and stakeholders. The firm has cut out all exhibitions except one, preferring to communicate its ethos and culture directly through this event.

For Pilosio CEO Dario Roustayan, the awards are an important way to connect with clients and strengthen the business; the combination of altruism and marketing make perfect sense: “What we are doing here is only possible and sustainable if we have a successful business,” he said.

Pilosio also used the event to reveal its ‘Shelters for Refugees’ project. Working with Habitat for Humanity founder, architect Cameron Sinclair, the firm has developed buildings for refugees constructed of scaffolding tubes and local materials such as sand or gravel.

“We felt the need to become stakeholders, to do something concrete,” said Routsayan.

With the possibility of combining the ‘L’ shaped units to create single homes, communities and buildings such as schools or clinics, the first two pilot school projects are already planned for a refugee camp in Jordan. The idea is that the structures can be dismantled at the end of a camp’s life and used to rebuild homes and community facilities in the refugees’ home countries.

The event also included a panel discussion of five influential women identified as Builders of Peace. These included Carolyn Miles, CEO of Save the Children, Khalida Brohl, founder of the Sughar Empowerment Society which fights honour killings in Pakistan, and Salini Costruttori board member and Poste Italiane chairman Luisa Todini.

Pilosio’s approach was very well-received among guests, with Tarek Al-Nassar, managing director of Arabian Roots Scaffolding taking to the stage to praise both Roustayan and Pilosio’s leadership.

The library will become part of the network of the Ghanaian education system. It will play a key role as in Ghana, 83% of the population does not have internet and in schools not all students have access to books. It will give training to graduates for set periods and also provide educational activities for children. In addition, the library will offer the opportunity to train new professionals in culture and education.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Vision Zero for the Balkans: IRF road safety conference
    August 31, 2022
    A landmark regional road safety conference convened by the International Road Federation (IRF) and the Bulgarian Branch Association Road Safety (BBARS) on June 1-2 2022 concluded with renewed calls for cross-border collaboration, institutional capacity strengthening, and investments in life-saving innovations to tackle the road traffic injury crisis that is responsible for 6,500 deaths annually in the region.
  • IRF and FIA Seminar energises discussion on safe and sustainable roads
    June 30, 2014
    IRF, together with the FIA, held a high-level seminar in Paris on Road Safety, Sustainable Development and Financing. Contributors to the seminar included, among others, the President and Secretary General of the FIA, the Secretary General of ITF, and the Chairman of iRAP IRF and the Fédération Internationale Automobile (FIA) jointly organised a seminar on Road Safety, Sustainable Development and Financing on Thursday 17 April, one week after the UN adopted its latest resolution on “Improving global road sa
  • AtkinsRéalis wins Île d’Orléans Bridge work
    May 2, 2024
    VIDEO: The new US$1.96 billion replacement Île d’Orléans Bridge near Quebec city, Canada, will feature two wider lanes of traffic, shoulders, multi-use lanes for pedestrians and cyclists as well as redevelopment of a major interchange and creation of green spaces.
  • Bertha ends her Alaskan Way voyage in Seattle
    December 21, 2017
    Seattle's State Route 99 viaduct is coming down. David Arminas was on site. Bertha, the world’s largest diameter earth pressure balance tunnel boring machine, with a cutterhead diameter of 17.5m, is no more. Her 2.7km journey underneath the waterfront area of Seattle finished on April 4 and the power went off for the last time on an extraordinary TBM that had finally completed an extraordinary job. “A small sidewalk job would have had more impact on city traffic than we have had,” says Brian Russell a v