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ReGen Villages
If you move into a new neighborhood being constructed outside of
Amsterdam, your salad greens might come from the greenhouse attached to
your home. Your eggs could be gathered from the village chicken coop,
and your food waste would all get harvested for compost.
ReGen Villages
is a startup real estate development company aiming to build small,
self-sustaining residential communities around the world. The first one
is expected to be completed in Almere, Netherlands in 2018. Unlike
traditional subdivisions, ReGen villages would be “regenerative” (hence
the name), since they’d use resources in a closed loop.
“Regenerative means systems where the output of one system can
actually be the input of another,” ReGen’s founder, James Ehrlich tells
Business Insider.
In ReGen villages, household food waste is composted and fed to
flies, which in turn feeds fish, which then fertilizes aquaponic gardens
(multi-layered systems that combine fish farming and hydroponic
agriculture, with plant roots submerged in nutrient-rich solution rather
than soil). Those aquaponic farms grow produce for residents to eat, as
do seasonal gardens, which are be fertilized by waste from livestock
raised to feed residents. Rainwater is harvested and filtered for use in
the farms and gardens, and on-site solar panels power the homes.
ReGen Villages
Though this kind of regenerative, self-sufficient neighborhood might
sound like a pipe dream, ReGen has already determined its first two
sites. Ehrlich says he expects to sign a memo of understanding for a
plot of land in Lund, Sweden in the coming weeks — the agreement will
outline the intent to purchase the land and set forth initial terms. And
ReGen’s first site in the Netherlands is currently undergoing
archaeological testing to make sure the village won’t be built on top of
any historic ruins.
Ehrlich expects to break ground there in the first quarter of 2017,
begin construction by the end of the summer, and have the first 25 homes
built by the end of the year.
Each completed village will house 100 families on about 50 acres.
Each family’s house will have an attached greenhouse for growing
personal crops, and the village’s communal farms and livestock will be
managed and run by ReGen staff. Individuals can pitch in their labor as a
way to lower the monthly fees homeowners pay on top of their mortgages.
(In the Almere community, Ehrlich expects that cost to be around $560.)
ReGen Villages
“It’s this concept that the way you look at a subdivision is edible,
so you walk through the path and there’s berries and fruit trees and
nuts and spices and all kinds of things to enjoy,” Ehrlich says. “We
don’t do lawns, we don’t do golf courses or tennis courts. That’s a good
place to grow food, so we’re going to grow food there.”
Ehrlich refers to ReGen as the “Tesla of eco-villages,” because he
says the neighborhoods will allow eco-conscious people to elegantly go
off the grid on their own terms. The villages will also use sensors and
technology to monitor energy use, farming efficiency, and living
patterns, and send that data to the cloud so villages in similar
geographic regions can learn from each other. The strategy is similar to
the way Tesla uses machine learning to analyze data gathered from the
autopilot systems in its cars.
ReGen, which was founded in 2015, has partnered with Copenhagen-based
architecture firm Effekt to design all the villages. Ehrlich says he
hopes to build many more than the two that are already in progress —
he’s in discussions about buying sites in Denmark, Norway, Germany and
Belgium.
ReGen Villages
Ehrlich says the ReGen villages are designed to give people an
environmentally friendly alternative to urban life. He also hopes they
can help make agriculture more sustainable and less wasteful.
He envisions these communities as disaster-resistant as well, since
they could likely continue running if the current grid were compromised.
He mentions Superstorm Sandy as an example.
“My family was without power for three weeks, and it got real after
about three days,” he says. “You run out of food, and your credit card
doesn’t work, and even if you have cash, you go to the supermarket and
the shelves are bare. It doesn’t take long for civilization to collapse,
for there to be chaos.”
Not every village could produce enough food or harvest enough water
to satisfy all of its residents, of course. Ehrlich says the percentage
of the nutritional needs the village could fulfill will depend on the
climate in a given place (a farm in Hawaii could produce more year-round
food than one in Sweden), as well as what the residents have come to
expect to eat (imported delicacies, processed food, etc).
But Ehrlich’s initial estimates are optimistic — he says a village
could produce enough fresh food to take care of 50-100% of the needs of
its residents.
ReGen Villages
And if there’s any excess food or energy gathered, he says, that
could also be sold, and the profits could offset residents’ fees.
Ehrlich’s next step is to firm up the designs for the different
houses that prospective buyers will be able to purchase in the
Netherlands. Then he can start compiling the initial list of people who
are seriously interested in moving in.
Source:
http://www.businessinsider.com/self-sufficient-village-regen-2016-9
http://www.businessinsider.com/self-sufficient-village-regen-2016-9