Thursday, September 19, 2013

Ever built a mobile community workspace?

GreeningRozzie is starting a great new project - the Rozzie GreenMobile, a mobile community workspace.

In the last few years we’ve come up with great projects that require a space to meet, store materials, hold workshops and be accessible to the different communities that make up Roslindale.

We think the key to realizing these projects is a mobile community workspace. We know that this kind of mobile workspace can be successful because one of our board members, Beth Ireland, is part of the collaborative art team Turning Around America, a mobile education project that brings art education to underserved communities. The Turning Around America team created the Mobile Work Shop, a van with a full woodworking shop and living space, and Sanctuary, a sustainable trailer that’s also a 2D art studio. www.turningaroundamerica.com.

Picture something like this!
The Rozzie GreenMobile will allow us to practice our sustainability mission in a practical application – outfitting a used step van with solar panels, a passive solar heater made from recycled materials, and exterior fold-down workbenches that will enable us to bring projects to every corner of our community. It will be a constant presence in our community reminding everyone that we can lower our carbon footprint in fun, innovative, creative ways.

The mobile space will allow us to store materials for tool and seed swaps, tree and garden workshops, and projects at the farmers market.

We’re mobilizing for this project now. Please join us! Let us know if you have any interest in building, fundraising for, documenting, and using a Rozzie Mobile Community Space.

Want some inspiration? Check out the Turning Around America Sanctuary mobile workshop and sustainable trailer.


Please join us.

- Amy, Beth, Eric, Kim, Pam, and the rest of us at GreeningRozzie

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Hold the next mayor accountable

The Mayor's race is in the home stretch! Now’s the time to sign the Neighborhoods for Climate Accountability climate action pledge to hold the next mayor accountable for taking action on climate change.

Let’s make sure the next mayor of Boston uses the Menino administration’s environmental record as a springboard, and that the good ideas and lofty rhetoric of the campaign turn into measurable progress on tackling climate change.

Monday, September 9, 2013

Boston mayoral candidates talk climate

The environmental views of the Boston mayoral candidates are coming into focus. Read their responses to the Neighborhoods for Climate Accountability questionnaire about climate change. Neighborhoods for Climate Accountability is a coalition of neighborhood green groups.

Also, read candidates' responses to the Boston Globe's environmental questionnaire, and candidates' statements from Boston Greenfest's August 16 Mayoral EcoForum.

We also posted about the Boston green mayor forum held on July 9.

And don't miss the Boston City Council District 5 Candidate Forum, on Thursday, September 12 from 5:45 to 8:30 at Saint Nectarios Church, 39 Belgrade Ave.

Tuesday, September 3, 2013

Colombian village’s story inspires dreams of sustainable communities

By Hannah Pullen-Blasnik

In July, the sustainability book group discussed the book Gaviotas: A Village to Reinvent the World by Alan Weisman. This true story chronicles the vision Paolo Lugari sets out to make a reality: a sustainable, energy-efficient community in the llanos of Colombia, one of the most inhospitable environments in existence. He reasoned that if a village could survive agriculturally, economically, and artistically in the war-ravaged Colombian llanos, a village could survive anywhere in the world.

Although the odds seemed stacked against them, slowly a village sprouted from the infertile soil; a village run on wind turbines converting the mild breezes into energy, efficient water pumps that tapped water sources that had previously seemed inaccessible, solar-powered kettles that sterilized the water so it was suitable for drinking, and much more.

The most amazing feat they accomplished was to turn the fallow savanna into a beautiful rainforest. Starting with a single pine tree that managed to grow, the village planted two million pine trees that encouraged the regrowth of a previously extinct rainforest, thereby re-establishing an entire lost ecosystem.

At the book group meeting, our discussion started with the awe of a small village regrowing an entire rainforest. In order to meet their goal of two million trees, the villagers worked 24/7 planting trees, each taking a shift after finishing their normal workday performing other tasks for the community. The pine trees, in addition to giving root to the rainforest, provided a source of economic stability for the village as they collected the pine resin to sell. Once the pines became old, they cut them down to use as biofuel so as to use every aspect of the pines. The pines were eventually replaced by the natural growth, serving as a starting point that allowed a natural rainforest to reemerge.

We then approached the big question: can it be replicated? Does Gaviotas serve as a plan for the future, for other seemingly inhospitable environments, or is it simply a one-time miracle? In creating Gaviotas, Paolo Lugari certainly seemed to think it could be replicated. He specifically placed Gaviotas in the relatively inhospitable llanos to prove that villages can be created anywhere. He was concerned with the world facing overpopulation and viewed these environments as new habitats for people to live in. He devised the village as a model society for the third world, by the third world. But not every Gaviotas will have a Paolo Lugari to guide them. Was Lugari himself essential to the village’s survival?

In Maine, paper companies have tried to regrow the forests by planting trees for all the trees being cut down. However, it does not take on the same life that the forest once had, as the variety in plant life that creates the forest is missing. These forests are not regrowing in the way Gaviotas regrew a forest in the llanos. In fact, although Gaviotas was created over twenty-five years ago, nowhere else have people been able to replicate the amazing success Gaviotas had on a comparable scale.

Perhaps the most important ingredient to Gaviotas’ success was found in the social structure they established. In the village, there was no hierarchy. In the community everyone was equal, and everyone was expected to do work to help the entire community survive. They met with many obstacles in their struggle for success, and all villagers were involved in thinking up solutions to the problems again and again until they met with success. There are many inventions that can be taken away from their experience, but maybe the most important takeaway is the journey they went through and the community they built, rather than the incredible destination they eventually arrived at.