VanLife
OpenVan.campβ World of motorhomes — here

Report a problem

What is the problem?

Gaza Refugees Need Caravans for Shelter

08.01.2026 08:00 1 min 1 source
spiritofaqsa.or.id IND
Gaza Refugees Need Caravans for Shelter

Tens of thousands of families in Gaza live in tents unsuitable for protection from heat and cold. The Al-Barka Association in Algeria has initiated local production of 30 caravans made from waterproof wood, costing $12–15 thousand per unit. According to Gaza's Ministry of Public Works, over 200,000 housing units are needed, and tents violate technical and humanitarian standards, causing respiratory and skin diseases.

This content was collected automatically from public sources. All images and content belong to their respective copyright holders. Copyright information

Story sources

Gaza Refugees Need Caravans for Shelter

08.01.2026 spiritofaqsa.or.id IND
Quiz: test yourself
Guess the vanlife lingo — 3 quick questions
1 / 3
Q1 What does an inverter do in a motorhome?

You May Be Interested

All News
GB United Kingdom

Finally, someone has designed a camper trailer for electric cars. It was born from a failed idea: a roof box that turned into a house

Wheelhome has launched the Dashaway eCT, an ultralight camper trailer designed specifically for electric vehicles. The trailer weighs 340 kg, offers 3.94 m² of living space with a kitchen and convertible bed, and features a gas-free, all-electric system. Priced at £26,225, it addresses the range and weight concerns that plagued its previous roof-mounted prototype for the Tesla Model 3.

CH Switzerland

If Homer Simpson had designed a camper car, it would have been like this six-wheeled Cadillac with a coffee maker and TV

In 1978, Swiss designer Franco Sbarro created a mobile office based on a Cadillac Eldorado for Saudi businessman Joseph E. Adjadj. The vehicle, over seven meters long and weighing nearly three tons, featured four large seats, desks, telephones, a refrigerator, a coffee maker, and a TV, but no beds or kitchen. The project remained a single prototype, as it was considered too large, expensive, and ahead of its time for an era without remote work culture.

News from Palestine

All News
Weekly Digest #20 · May 11–17 Lifestyle © AI · OpenVan.camp
Article

Weekly Digest #20 · May 11–17

Volkswagen brought the ID. Buzz back to the United States — complete with a mattress and curtains. A wildfire in Arizona burned down a dozen motorhomes, and Lake Tekir in Turkey flooded just as many. While Ibiza fines illegal campers up to €30,000, a retired couple from Mallorca has been living in 10 m² for five years and saving €1,400 a month. Plus: the largest campsite in the US at 607 pitches, a closed naturist beach on the North Sea, and Dolby Atmos in a trailer — all in this edition.

Weekly Digest #19 · May 4–10 Lifestyle © AI · OpenVan.camp
Article

Weekly Digest #19 · May 4–10

After almost 70 years, Bürstner has stopped making caravans — and nobody was particularly surprised once sales had fallen by a third. Sweden registered 62% more motorhomes and is preparing to let them drive faster. Chet Hanks moved into a retirees' trailer park in Nashville — for the country music career, not the savings. Plus a Korean workation site for 100 motorhomes, an unmanned trailer hotel on Hokkaido, and a gyrocopter pilot who landed on a highway and clipped an oncoming motorhome — all in this issue.

Weekly Digest #18 · Apr 28 – May 3 Lifestyle © AI · OpenVan.camp
Article

Weekly Digest #18 · Apr 28 – May 3

Bürstner has halted caravan production as demand fell 13%. Poland is proposing to scrap road tolls for campervans, while Liguria counts the cost of 8,000 motorhomes descending on the region. Tom Hanks' son has swapped Hollywood for a trailer in pursuit of a music career, and a French couple has driven 100,000 km from the North Cape to Senegal — and that's not even the whole story. All this in this issue.

VanLife Weekly #17 · April 20–26 Lifestyle © AI · OpenVan.camp
Article

VanLife Weekly #17 · April 20–26

Greece has cancelled its own camper van ban — a year and a half on, as if it got cold feet. In Tenerife, 500 motorhomes blocked a motorway demanding the same — pitches and dump stations. In Miami, 200 families are being evicted from a motorhome park by September, while Córdoba is only just applying for permission for a new overnight area. Plus 21 kg of cocaine in a motorhome in Lanzarote, a fake eight-wheeled Mercedes-AMG G63 and a Starbucks coffee trailer in Seoul — in this issue.

Weekly Digest #16 · 13–19 April Lifestyle © AI · OpenVan.camp
Article

Weekly Digest #16 · 13–19 April

Almería is putting up physical barriers to keep motorhomers off its former fairground — while Turkey simply evicts them from the beach. Lightship is quadrupling its electric-caravan factory in Colorado, even as 50% of Italian motorhome renters turn out to be under 35. Plus 800 kg of hashish in a motorhome at the Spanish border, Anker's 800 W charger running off the alternator, and Carstay as the mobile HQ of a Tokyo festival — all in this issue.

PS Palestine

Construction of permanent shelter center with caravans begins in Beit Hanoun

The municipality of Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip has started a project to build a permanent shelter center for owners of destroyed homes. The project includes 100 housing units on an 8-dunam plot near Beit Hanoun hospital. The first phase, costing about $156,000, involves installing water and sewage networks, electrification, and road construction. The second phase, manufacturing the caravans, costs about $815,000. An additional 200 units are planned for later stages.

Install OpenVan.camp

Get quick access and offline reading.

Install on iOS

  1. 1 Tap Share in Safari.
  2. 2 Choose "Add to Home Screen".
  3. 3 Confirm by tapping Add.

Already installed

The app is already installed on this device.

Install from browser menu

Use your browser menu to install or add to home screen.

→ Glossary