Housing for the Future: Eco-villages

Posted : September 15, 2010 by Edwina, Category: Sustainability

Eco-friendly living can come in many shapes and forms - from recycling paper and aluminum to placing solar panels on your home, to the more extreme option of living in an eco-village.  An eco-village focuses on organic farming, green building, communal spaces and many other aspects of sustainability.  For those that remember the communes of the 1960s and 1970s, eco-villages do have some similar characteristics as they both center around sharing and using the land to farm and eat but the main difference is they aren’t solely for hippies anymore.  From Sweden to Missouri and everywhere in between, these new settlements are popping up and prospering.

“The future of housing, in general, is sustainable communities,” Laura Mamo, a sociology professor at the University of Maryland and co-author of Living Green, tells Green House. She argues that single-family homes on large suburban lots have failed society, because they’ve created social isolation, dependence on personal cars and intolerably hefty mortgages for homeowners. 

Each village differs - but for the most part, residents own the home but not the land it sits on, helping to significantly reduce the taxes. Residents of these communities are usually responsible to help out by cooking communal dinners, tending to the wood-burning furnace that heats all the homes or maintaining the surrounding gardens.  Each eco-village or community has its own set rules and way of life but they all share the same principles of living a more simplified life and reducing their overall carbon footprint for a better tomorrow.

If living in an eco-village isn’t for you, then try looking at some of the unique ways these residents live and try adapting them to your neighborhood. Why not unite with your neighbors and try growing a few items in each of your yards and sharing the crop? Or set up a monthly volunteer day to plant new trees or flowers in your neighborhood parks? These are small ways to make an impact in your own community and make your own pseudo-eco-village!



Comments (1)

Myles

September 21st, 2010 at 11:14 pm    


LOVE the idea for community meals. Too often families no longer share vital meal times which provide community and nourishment. Many recipes are as easy for 20 as 2 so sharing cooking nights can ensure that wholesome, healthy meals are always had. No short cuts.

Community gardens obviously go along with this great. Many existing communities could easily start these things.

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