Archive for the 'cities' Category

Victory Gardens 2007+

Wednesday, February 21st, 2007

Garden TrikeA local network of home gardens = A community of food producers!
Victory Gardens 2007+ calls for a more active role for cities in shaping agricultural and food policy. It is a concept we are trying to get adopted by the city of San Francisco that would provide a subsidized home gardening program for individuals and neighborhoods.

This program offers tools, training & materials for urban dwellers to participate in a city-wide transformation of underutilized backyards into productive growing spaces.

The project draws from the historical model of the 1940’s American Victory garden program to provide a basis for developing urban agriculture as a viable form of sustainable food practice in the city.

See the Video

-- AmyFranceschini

William McDonough talk

Monday, January 22nd, 2007

William McDonough

I was introduced to William McDonough and his book Cradle to Cradle by Jane while working with her on this project. It is a fantastic book that seems to aim to change the way the reader thinks more than teach a lesson.

I just listened to a talk he gave a few years back on the Social Innovation Conversations podcast that is an excellent introduction to his ideas and way of thinking. It’s definitely worth the hour listen.

-- MattShanley

Terreform: New paradigm for the future?

Monday, January 22nd, 2007
Terreform <span class='category'>future</span> City 2100Jane has asked us to think about the future…
How are you, in your daily projects/thinking/work, developing a new paradigm for the future? Clearly our old patterns/habits/roles are not helping us move forward anymore. How can we make a better paradigm that everyone knows is just common sense? What does that take?
We, as the nonprofit Terreform, expect dramatic transformations, although we can’t predict exactly what they will be: visionaries are optimists, not magicians. We work on cities, esp New York. Our projects therefore seek to reinforce what is best about the city – in both its forms and its life –by speculating about the consequences of a radically new level of sustainability. We base our projects on one clarifying hypothesis: in the future cities will become self-sufficient in its vital necessities, including energy, food, water, air supply, employment, housing, manufacture, movement systems, waste processing, and cultural life.
This condition of self-reliance is both improbable and indispensable. Improbable, because the planet is shrinking, because the city must be the nexus of flows of people, resources, and information. Indispensable, however, because of the planetary crisis reflected in the misdistribution of finite resources, so well reflected in our “ecological footprint” – the actual territory needed to supply our needs. To state it succinctly: If the everyone in the world today consumed at the level we do, two additional planets would be required to support them.
For New York we propose transformation via a radical strategy: the reversal of figure and ground, of public and private property. We begin with citywide “greenfill,” the immediate transfer of half the aggregate of street space from the vehicular to the pedestrian and public realm. Later, the streets become building sites and, as new, highly autonomous, buildings grow in intersections and wind their way down streets and avenues and through vacant lots, the old, deteriorated, fabric will fade away to be replaced both by an abundance of productive green space and by a new labyrinth of irregular blocks, a paradise for people on foot. Fast movement will be accomplished underground in a superbly modernized subway and along the rivers and new cross-island channels. The city streets – extended in their length but reduced in their area – will support a marvelous technology we know to be just over the horizon, some fabulous and slow conveyance summoned with a whistle or collapsed into a pocket.
Please see Terreform.org for more….

-- Mitchell Joachim