WWF Celebrates Builders Who Protect Mangroves

In an innovative approach to coastal preservation, Belizean developers and community leaders are demonstrating that construction and conservation can coexist harmoniously. The World Wildlife Fund (WWF) recently honored these pioneers at their 2025 Mangrove Friendly Development Challenge ceremony, recognizing property owners, resorts, and community organizations that have embraced sustainable building practices.

Nadia Bood, WWF’s Senior Program Officer, emphasized the critical importance of this paradigm shift, noting that approximately 70% of Belize’s mangrove ecosystems exist on privately held land. This geographical reality places the future of these vital natural defenses squarely in the hands of individual landowners and developers.

Contrary to conventional development approaches that prioritize clearance and concrete construction, the award-winning projects showcase how integrating mangroves into architectural landscapes creates both aesthetic appeal and functional environmental benefits. Bood highlighted the superior resilience of natural mangrove barriers compared to artificial seawalls, which frequently succumb to cracking or catastrophic failure during severe weather events.

“These projects prove that landowners don’t face a binary choice between development and conservation,” Bood stated. “By working with nature rather than against it, they’re creating beautiful, functional spaces that simultaneously protect Belize’s coastline and biodiversity.”

The celebrated initiatives range from luxury eco-resorts that incorporate mangrove waterways into their design to community centers built on stilts that preserve the underlying ecosystem. This growing movement represents a significant advancement in sustainable coastal management, offering a replicable model for other tropical nations facing similar environmental challenges.