Social Impact

We build on this land, we build trust in this community.
Our responsibility never ends.

Our responsibility doesn’t end when the project is complete. We are true members of this community, growing alongside it as development partners, sharing in its joys and struggles alike. This is the most honest practice of Ubuntu: “I am because you are.”


Isaac Construction Social Impact Overview

Go Together

At ISAAC Construction, we measure our presence in the DRC not only by what we build, but by how we show up for the people around us. Development means little if it does not reach those who need it most — and that conviction is what gave rise to Go Together.

Hosted by Good People Co. Ltd and World Human Bridge, and made possible through the sponsorship of Manna Church and ISAAC Construction, this initiative brought clothing such as underwear, garments, and everyday essentials to people in Kinshasa who lacked access to even the most basic necessities. In 2021, what began as a collection of donated items became a direct act of care delivered to the streets and communities of the Congolese capital.

Initiatives like this are why we are here. Not to extract value from this land and move on, but to be woven into the fabric of this city, its struggles, its people, and its future. ISAAC Construction is not a foreign company operating in the DRC. We are a local company, built on relationships, sustained by trust, and committed to growing together with the communities we call home.

We Walk Together

At ISAAC Construction, building is never just about structures. It is about the people living within them — and the understanding that we are all made stronger by each other’s wellbeing. From the beginning, we have believed that real development only happens when a company is willing to be part of the community it works in, not just a presence passing through it.

In partnership with Seongnam City Disability Welfare Center and POSCO ICT, we collected assistive equipment such as wheelchairs, crutches, and mobility aids which not use in South Korea. Each item was carefully cleaned and repaired before being delivered directly to people with disabilities in the Democratic Republic of Congo, giving back mobility, dignity, and a greater degree of independence to those who needed it most. This was not a one-time effort, it was a commitment we returned to in 2015, 2017, and 2019.

We did not come to the DRC to build and leave. We came to grow alongside its people, to understand their needs, and to be accountable to the communities that have welcomed us. Because to us, that is the only way to truly build anything at all.

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