most popular:
2008 Holiday Gift Guides



most popular: Hot Home Wind Turbines


most popular:
$19k Electric Car in US


th comments
Jennifer said: "Very stylish! I definitely can see myself riding this to work...." [read]

Jay Fretz said: "If "The motors do not drive the car, but kick in to provide a power boost...", then how can "Range on electric alone is expected to to be in the or..." [read]

Jay said: "Sad story indeed. Unless we get the good fortune of offspring, Man will have yet again driven a species to extinction. Something it seem to be ve..." [read]

said: "OK, why isn't the option of voting to NOT tax gas guzzlers? There can be no shift to more fuel efficient vehicles unless more fuel efficient vehic..." [read]

Carl Trimble said: "I think its cell phone interference. If you talk to bees like I do, they hate cell phones. They want us to go back to land lines...." [read]

Back to the Commune, Man...

by Lloyd Alter, Toronto on 03. 2.06
Design & Architecture

commune.jpg

Watch this trend. Those of us approaching our "best before" date have to consider how we are going to live when we no longer can be completely independent. Toronto Architect Carol Kleinfeldt proposed this idea a couple of years ago and it is happening now: People working cooperatively to develop modern communes. They don't have to be all fancy new construction like this very high end one; they don't have to be in the country; they do have to be people working together to pool resources, talent and experience to live together and support each other.
It is sort of a focused cohousing project, a concept Treehugger has admired here and in other posts. There are about a dozen co-operative housing developments for the elderly in development, from Santa Fe, N.M., to St. Petersburg, Fla., a fledgling movement to communally address "the challenge of aging non-institutionally," said Charles Durett, an architect in Nevada City, Calif., who imported the concept he named co-housing — people buying homes in a community they plan and run together — from Denmark in the late 1960's." (Charles Durett and Kathryn MCamant wrote the book on Cohousing) Read the New York Times article ::Growing Old Together, in New Kind of Commune

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)

th ads
th top picks
th ads