CYCLE TECHYALESH
sustainable mobility
We campaign for our streets to reflect how the majority moves: walking, cycling and by collective transport
CYCLE TECHEYALESH
As advocates of sustainable mobility and non-motorised transport, we strive every day for Addis Ababa to become a bicycle friendly city. But we know women face countless struggles to make this a reality, from daily street harassment, sexual violence and gender stereotypes. This is why we have come together with our allies at Egre Menged Impact and co-created Cycle Techyalesh, a free women's bicycle school that takes place on the car-free streets of Menged Le Sew. Cycle Techyalesh is a collective space for women to learn to cycle, gain basic bicycle maintenance skills, learn about bicycle safety, build their confidence and take back the streets.
Addis Abeba’s Non-Motorised Transport Strategy has created the target of half of the capital city’s cyclists to be women by 2028. Through Cycle Techyalesh we are making this goal a little more possible every single week and creating urban streets that are truly for everyone.
sustainable mobility
sustainable mobility
We campaign for our streets to reflect how the majority moves: walking, cycling and by collective transport
Menged Le Sew
Ethiopia's open streets, car-free movement. We make streets for people.
Cycle Techyalesh
A free women's bicycle school and collective space for women to learn to cycle, build their confidence and take back the streets.
circular systems old
circular systems
We are grounded in principles of zero waste, upcycling and circular economies to create ecologically sustainable cities
Ye Zembil Melse
Plastic began as a rather benign invention, creating convenience for everyday modern life. Now, in the words of National Geographic, “we are drowning in it.” Plastic waste pollutes our planet in such quantities that it is now considered a crisis. More than 40% of plastic is used only once, and it estimated that the substance could take 450 years to biodegrade, if at all. Since its’ launch in the 1950s, the earth is now filled with 6.9 billion tonnes of plastic waste, 91% of which has never been recycled. UN Environment has tracked that every year 5 trillion single-use plastic bags are used worldwide. By 2050, it is predicted there will be more plastic in the oceans than fish. This trend is setting up human and planetary life for disaster.
Ye Zembil Melse is a collaborative campaign for a plastic-free Ethiopia. We use zembils (woven baskets used in Ethiopia and around the world) as a metaphor for the abundant traditional alternatives to the plastics crisis. Using creative approaches, digital campaigning, policy advocacy, community outreach, and alternative business models, we are collectively campaigning to make Ethiopia plastic-free.
Join the movement!
Learn more about our campaign here and sign and share our digital petition to ban single-use plastics!
Explore the proposed bill to ban plastic bags by the Environment Protection Authority of Ethiopia.
Must reads!
arts + education
arts + education
Arts, culture, and storytelling shape our collective imagination and the worlds we believe are possible. We harness the power of multimedia arts, creative storytelling and popular education for community engagement and collective impact on urban sustainability.
Stay in the loop
Menged Le Sew
sustainable mobility
We campaign for our streets to reflect how the majority moves: walking, cycling and by collective transport
Menged Le Sew
In cities from Accra to Nairobi, Dakar to Addis Ababa, and Dar es Salaam to Lagos, pedestrians, cyclists, public and collective transport users dominate the streets. Despite these urban realities, transport design has followed a car-centric model, creating unsafe streets, choking air pollution, endless traffic jams and deadly vehicle accidents.
Here to reimagine our cities is Menged Le Sew, meaning “Streets for People.” As Ethiopia’s open streets movement, Menged Le Sew is inspired to transform urban Ethiopia into an environment that is socially connected, ecologically sustainable, and powered by non-motorized mobility. Every month across Ethiopian cities, we open streets to people and close them to motor vehicles, creating the magic of car-free streets. Menged Le Sew is a dynamic partnership of multiple city offices, research institutes, civil society organizations and government ministries. Together we campaign to shape sustainable urban design, influence transport planning and allow urban communities to reimagine our cities and streets as spaces of social connection, clean air, safety, and mobility for all.
Menged Le Sew was born out of the Open Streets Exchange for African Cities, organized by Open Streets Cape Town in Cape Town, South Africa in 2018. The exchange brought together urban enthusiasts, cycling activists and city designers from across the continent to collectively reshape our cities and streets as spaces for people. Menged Le Sew is inspired by the Ciclovía of Bogotá, Colombia, which first emerged in the 1970s, and now opens more than 120 km of streets for people to walk, cycle and play every Sunday and public holiday.
circular systems
circular systems
We are grounded in principles of zero waste, upcycling and circular economies to create ecologically sustainable cities
Ye Zembil Melse
Plastic began as a rather benign invention, creating convenience for everyday modern life. Now, in the words of National Geographic, “we are drowning in it.” Plastic waste pollutes our planet in such quantities that it is now considered a crisis. More than 40% of plastic is used only once, and it estimated that the substance could take 450 years to biodegrade, if at all. Since its’ launch in the 1950s, the earth is now filled with 6.9 billion tonnes of plastic waste, 91% of which has never been recycled. UN Environment has tracked that every year 5 trillion single-use plastic bags are used worldwide. By 2050, it is predicted there will be more plastic in the oceans than fish. This trend is setting up human and planetary life for disaster.
Ye Zembil Melse is a collaborative campaign for a plastic-free Ethiopia. We use zembils (woven baskets used in Ethiopia and around the world) as a metaphor for the abundant traditional alternatives to the plastics crisis. Using creative approaches, digital campaigning, policy advocacy, community outreach, and alternative business models, we are collectively campaigning to make Ethiopia plastic-free.
Join the movement!
Learn more about our campaign here and sign and share our digital petition to ban single-use plastics!
Explore the proposed bill to ban plastic bags by the Environment Protection Authority of Ethiopia.