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Archive for April, 2008

Community, Economy, and Utopia at Forbes.com

Saturday, April 12th, 2008
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Findhorn in ScotlandForbes.com has a special feature section on Utopia which has a great article on intentional communities. The article gives an overview on the US movement with a focus on communities in New York and specifically the Ithaca area. The article includes Photo slideshow of communities around the world including Ecovillage at Ithaca, The Farm, Zegg, Twin Oaks, Arcosanti, Crystal Waters, Findhorn, and Yamagishi.

"The two groups growing dramatically now in America are ecovillages, which are usually rural or semi-rural, and cohousing, which tends to be in or near cities," says Bill Metcalf, a sociologist at Griffith University in Australia who studies communalism and has lived in two intentional communities.

Part of the motivation is that we have a very strongly increased sense of alienation in the country than we did a generation ago," said Laird Schaub, founder and resident of Sandhill Farm in Missouri.

Shared common spaces and clever architectural features--like thick walls and south-facing windows--contribute to energy usage per person that is 40% less than for the average American. A typical couple living in Ecovillage at Ithaca pays about $500 in energy bills a year, compared to a couple in a downtown Ithaca apartment who can pay hundreds of dollars a month during the winter.

There is also a short video on The Fellowship Community, a community which focuses on care for the ill and elderly. The video interview with the founders of the community describes their amazing experience in creating a community that could give long term care to their members and residents. Their unique experience offers an alternative to the wider culture's experiences with elder care. (Note video may not be viewable on Firefox)

But the utopia feature is not all positive on the concept of utopia. Forbes also has an article on the failures of utopian experiments. Mostly the article highlights all the "failed" communities of America's past and comes from an economic/business perspective (it is Forbes.com after all).

The competition for succession invariably favors not the wise, but the ruthless. This is especially dangerous in communistic societies. Where selfishness is a sin or a crime, everyone is guilty; you don't want your antagonists gaining the authority to sit in judgment.

A second lesson is that ideals are constraints, and the more constraints one tries to impose, the less viable the community will be. It's hard enough for a private company--an organization focused exclusively on economic success--to survive intact for multiple generations. Add to that special utopian claims on the firm by the employees and you can see how tough the odds are. The best bet is to run utopia as a business, which is exactly what many communities concluded.

A second lesson is that ideals are constraints, and the more constraints one tries to impose, the less viable the community will be. It's hard enough for a private company--an organization focused exclusively on economic success--to survive intact for multiple generations. Add to that special utopian claims on the firm by the employees and you can see how tough the odds are. The best bet is to run utopia as a business, which is exactly what many communities concluded.

This last argument seems to contradict the research presented recently in the Economist that claimed that religious communities were more successful if they had more strictures on their membership, not less.

Not to stop with things balanced, Forbes produces another article on the failures of American Utopianism including a photo slideshow including pictures of the Jonestown mass suicide.

But wait there is more! An article about someone's not-so-happy experience living in a shared household for a year in college. After a brief smack at Earthaven and Damanhur the author describes her brief experience in a dysfunctional version of community, drawing general conclusions from that experience.

Read the whole special report on Utopia.

 
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Cubes and Crayons Provides Coworking for Parents

Monday, April 7th, 2008

The San Francisco Chronicle profiled a new Coworking facility in Menlo Park that offers both short term office space and professional childcare. Coworking, a cafe-like community/collaboration space for developers, writers and independents, has been a growing phenomenon but this may be the first place to offer such a kid friendly environment.

"For new moms getting their toes back into the workforce, this is an innovative solution," said Patty Siegel, executive director of the California Child Care Resource & Referral Network, a statewide nonprofit group.

Today, Cubes and Crayons' front section holds five small offices, a conference room, a photocopier room and a kitchen with an espresso machine and snacks. The back area - separated by a small child-safety gate - is filled with a nap room, a lunch/art room and a large colorful play space filled with blocks, picture books, Duplo, a play kitchen and other toys.

Cubes & Crayons so far has about 25 members who sign up for a certain number of hours of work and child care each week, plus other users who drop in when space is available. Most are parents who use both the child care and the work space, but some are people who simply need quiet work space on an occasional basis.

I love the collaborative and cooperative nature of coworking and adding childcare seems like a natural fit. I can't wait to see a cohousing community or other urban community integrate coworking into their site and offer shared work and living arrangements side-by-side. Seems like adding a childcare co-op would maximize the synergy as both coworkers and cohousers could share in the service. Some day...

Read the article about kids and coworking in the SF Chronicle.

Cubes and Crayons website

More coworking on Community Buzz

 
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Historic Communities in the News

Wednesday, April 2nd, 2008

In the late 1700s and early 1800s the Harmony Society built three communities in Pennsylvania and Indiana attracting thousands of members and lasted for decades. The Harmonists are still making news in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review which recently ran a story on the historic commune.

And Mary Ann Landis, director of Old Economy Village, says she hopes people come to realize the role the Harmonists played in society at large.

Outsiders came to study their economic system. They were outspoken opponents of low tariffs on imported goods, to the point that one society member was called to testify about the matter before Congress.

Landis' hope is that visitors to the village "gain an appreciation for how important the Harmony Society was in the early part of the 19th century for the development of this part of Pennsylvania, as well as politically and economically for America."

But the Harmonists are not the only historic communalists getting press. The Baltimore Sun ran an article on the Jewish commune Yaazor which flourished in the early 1900s in Maryland. Yaazor was focused on immigrants trying to set up a new life in this country:

The newspaper explained [in 1906] that the "principal occupation at present is the pursuit of agriculture and stock-raising" and the "spirit of freedom, cleanliness and industry pervade the whole community. There are no idlers. Everyone is busy in the fields or homes. Only the young children seem to have time to play."

Yaazor represented a way of life that freed residents from the bone-breaking hours toiling in Baltimore's sweatshops and living in crowded tenements.

Its great to see positive portrayals of historic communities and their influence on our wider culture. Hopefully it can bring awareness to how modern communties might be doing the same.

Read the Harmonist Article

Read the Yaazor Article

 
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First Official UK Ecovillage Seeks Permits

Tuesday, April 1st, 2008

Lammas EcovillageLammas Ecovillage in Wales is seeking approval for their ecovillage under new UK government rules to allow a new form of rural mixed use development. Theirs would be the first ecovillage approved under these new rules which allow a mix a residential, agricultural, and commercial enterprises on much more affordable rural land.

Lammas has been getting a lot of press and exposure on blogs but not all of it has been accurate. EcoWorldly and TreeHugger recently posted a notice saying Lammas had been granted approval but a Lammas member commented to say that they had resubmitted their plans but is still awaiting approval. For more accurate info keep an eye on the Welsh news or on the Lammas site itself.

You can also see videos about Lammas at undercurrents.org:

Living in the Future and

Ecovillage Pioneers

Ecovillage scale modelI for one am certainly envious of their amazing scale model of their proposed village. If every ecovillage could bring together such a clear and compelling plan with models and video and detailed proposals it might shock planning departments into doing something!

 
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