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KAKR Buluh Awar is part of the revitalization of the historical Buluh Awar Village. The multifunction bamboo hall was built as trigger to transform the image of local people as the bamboo burners to bamboo preservers. In the process, the bamboo hall acts as a training tool as part of the community empowerment and enhances the craftmenship skill and income. Afterwards, the bamboo cultivation is an obligatory phase to ensure the sustainability work. Introduction The KAKR Bamboo Hall is part of a grand design for revitalizing the historical ground zero of a local church in Buluh Awar Village. Buluh is a Karonese term for bambu in Indonesian or bamboo in English, while Awar derives from Awaren in Karonese, which means hole on its nodes and allows water to flow naturally for households usage. Bamboo grows naturally in vast quantity and quality surrounding this village. The village was part of historical salt and trade route carried out by Perlanja Sira, salt bearers walking by feet during the pre-Dutch Colonialism era. Fast forward to modern era, the village is becoming less developed. No more trade glory. The bamboo is scarcely used in Buluh Awar and even burnt to provide vast land for productive crops such as paddy, brown sugar, durians. Things got worse due to massive illegal logging and deforestation which eventually caused huge landslide of football sized hole and cutting off the main road entering the village. The villagers had to improve other road as an alternative solution. The multifunction bamboo hall was initially designed and built as the trigger to educate people of its beneficial for the environmental issues. At the beginning, they strongly refused and doubted our idea to use bamboo as main materials due to its vulnerability to termites and humidity. However, through numbers of socialization and site visit to several bamboo buildings, they eventually accepted the design to be built.