Honduras Project

Honduras Project Students and Locals with shovels

Bringing Clean Water, Building Lasting Community

The Honduras Project is a student-led, short-term missions initiative that partners with rural villages in the mountains of Honduras to provide clean, running water. Each year, Wheaton students raise funds to build a gravity-fed water system that delivers fresh spring water directly to household faucets.


What We Do

Over six months of preparation, students work together through:

  • Hands-on fundraising projects
  • Team-building and community development
  • Weekly meetings for worship, prayer, and cultural preparation

During Spring Break, the team travels to Honduras for a week of service and holistic ministry. Students are paired with local work partners to dig trenches, lay and glue pipes, and build water tanks. Through shared work and time in one another’s homes, students and villagers build meaningful, Christ-centered relationships.

In addition to construction work, the team also leads:

  • Children’s programs
  • Women’s ministry gatherings
  • Evening evangelistic services

Local Ownership, Lasting Impact

Before the team arrives, villagers begin work on the system. After the team leaves, they finish construction and continue maintaining the system for years to come—guided by engineers and local leaders.

The Honduras Project provides resources and a week of partnership, but the village leads the way. Our goal is to empower communities to improve their quality of life—sustainably and with dignity.


Why We Go

Though our time in the village is short, it matters. In the shared labor, stories, and hospitality, students and villagers alike experience transformation—growing in faith, understanding, and unity as brothers and sisters in Christ.


Support Honduras Project

The Honduras Project operates year-to-year because of the support of friends, family, and HP alumni. There are two ways you can help support the project: through prayer and through giving.

Learn More About How You Can Support Us

Honduras Project water system designer

Honduras Project: Water Systems

A Sustainable, Low-Maintenance Design

Each village water system is designed by Honduran engineer Arnoldo Alvarez and his team. Built with bricks, cement, and PVC pipes, the system is powered entirely by gravity—no electricity required. Arnoldo’s designs have stood the test of time, with many still functioning decades later.

Where the Water Comes From

Every year, a clean mountain spring is located at an elevation above the village. To protect the water source from future contamination, the village purchases the surrounding land. The spring feeds into a cement collection box with two outlets—one for clean water, and one to drain sediment.

How Water Reaches the Village

Water flows downhill through 3.5-inch PVC pipes, buried about 50 cm deep to protect them from damage. Along the way, pressure is carefully regulated to prevent pipe bursts, using concrete pressure boxes where needed. As the system branches out through the community, pipe sizes gradually decrease to 2", 1", and ¾".

Each participating household receives a faucet with access to clean, running water.

Storage Tanks for Flow & Pressure

Every system includes at least one large storage tank, built above the village. It holds a full day's water supply and helps regulate pressure. The tank is round, constructed with bricks and mortar, sealed with cement, and covered to prevent contamination. If needed, a chlorine drip system can be added for water purification.

What Happens After the Team Leaves

Before the team departs, local men are trained in system construction and maintenance. One is selected as the village water caretaker, supported by a small annual contribution from each household. Extra materials are provided for future repairs. While the system is designed to last 20+ years, Arnoldo’s first build is still going strong more than two decades later.

Past Sites of the Honduras Project

The Honduras Project has worked in a different village in each year of its history. Here we chronicle the project's history and the people whose lives have been changed.

NOTE: As you can see, this section is still under development. We are still in the process of compiling the complete history of the project. If you were part of a past trip and have information, stories, or photographs to share, please contact us.

Year Village(s) Director
2018 El Caricillo Logan Robinson
2017  San Agustin Susan Lamb
2016  La Pedrosa  Kelly Ross 
2015  El Sinar and La Florida  Kelly Wilson 
2014  Maquingales  Jared Ellingsen 
2013  Los Cedros  Maddie Allen 
2012  Seales                     Emily Kertzman 
2011 Santa Rita Rebekah King
2010 Buena Vista Katherine McCullough
2009 San Ramón Blake Williamson
2008 Las Quebradas Kevin Befus
2007 Plan del Rosario and La Fortuna Stacey Maurer
2006 Las Brisas Tim Speace
2005 La Zarzalosa Jeremy Weber
2004 Las Vegas de Vera Cruz Gustave Warner
2003 Los Limones Eric Singley

Support Honduras Project

The Honduras Project operates year to year because of the generosity of others. The costs of travel and lodging are largely raised through Fall work projects, so donations to the project fund the water system itself.