Monday, April 29, 2013

2/27/13 – Solutions Grow From Place

In today’s reading in Ecological Design there was some really interesting stuff covered that I’d like to share my thoughts about.  Thinking about how Solutions Grow From Place gets the mind rolling and processing trying to figure out where we are going with this concept.

On page 82, the author provides an important idea, “Imagine attending to water, energy, waste, and land as carefully as you would attend to your garden, your children’s education, or your money.” That, to me, is a groundbreaking idea – yet it is so simple! He continues, “If these skills are a part of the fabric of everyday life, building sustainable communities is possible.” I totally agree and I love that this author has such an intellectual mind to bring up such a fundamental and key piece to building sustainable communities. 

It’s feeding my brain.                                             

“Sustainability begins in modest acts of responsibility.”

Thinking about that quote really makes sense. Why? Because I am pretty sure it has been irresponsible lives that have created unsustainable systems in the first place. People just don’t think in-depth about how their actions affect other pieces of our life or what their product will do to the environment. It really depends on the everyday actions of ordinary people (his words, not mine).

I really like this quote as well, “Bringing sustainability home is about growing a culture of sustainability that is suited to the particularities of place” (pg. 83 for reference). This brings in the idea of solutions growing from place. 

Furthermore, the author describes some projects and examples of designing from place. Basically I learned that we need to observe a particular location in order to create a sustainable place for that place specifically. There is no cut-and-dry solution for sustainability. That is why we need to realize that storm water collection systems are not ideal in a desert versus a place where it rains 80% of the year. 

It is amazing how in-depth one can get with the design components that they might apply to sustainable design that actually takes the place into consideration. It is very detailed: from water scarcity to cross winds to how much daylight they have to the temperature and weather conditions, solutions really do grow from place.

Here is a really good quote from page 92, “Ecological design begins with the particularities of place—the climate, topography, soils, water, plants and animals, flows of energy and materials, and other factors. The task is to integrate the design with these conditions in a way that respects the health of the place. The design works when it articulates new relationships within a context that preserves the relevant ecological structure.” I am going to tie that in with what I write below, then you can see my comments on why I think this is important. (please see below)

On that same page, the author describes wetlands and how their internal processes allow them to absorb nutrients, detoxify substances, and remove pathogens. He talks about artificial wetlands (or constructed wetlands) and how they are now being seeded and maintained specifically to purify wastewater. “When a constructed wetland is carefully matched to the level and type of wastewater it will received, it can both reclaim nutrients and provide exceptionally clean water. In this way, some of our own wastes can be integrated within existing ecological cycles. The constructed wetland creates a new waste/landscape relationship that keeps nutrients on-site, prevents downstream water from being polluted, and provides additional habitat.” 

I know that was a handful, but I think it was necessary. I think that this kind of a sustainable system, as a community really is essential to create an “ecological city”. We all have special gifts and talents that can be to our communities that create sustainable, ecological design such as constructed wetlands, sustainable buildings, utilizing gray water, and other efficient means of design with intent and actual care for the local environment which in turn reflects care for the global environment.

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