The Portland Sustainability Institute will host the 2012 Ecodistricts Summit October 23- 26, as part of the ongoing effort to build smarter, more resilient, and more livable urban districts across the world. Policymakers, planners, developers, business leaders, and financers from around the world will forge solutions to some of the more pressing issues facing metropolitan areas.

Simply put, an Ecodistrict is a neighborhood or district dedicated to sustainability. The Ecodistricts Summit will allow for forward-thinking, collaborative ideas, bringing together some of the world’s best minds to tackle population, pollution, civic engagement, and community development.

Leaders will share tools and strategies for neighborhood-scale sustainability within cities.
[Photo Credit: Sam Beebe, Ecotrust]

 

 

Keynote speaker Carol Coletta is currently the leader of ArtPlace, an American initiative created by banks, foundations, and agencies (like the National Endowment for the Arts), that seeks to transform communities by investing in art and culture. She hosted and produced a nationally syndicated public radio show called Smart City, served as president of CEOs for Cities, and directed the Mayor’s Institute on City Design in Memphis.

Coletta has highlighted the importance of compact, local, intimate communities for creativity and connection.

PoSI is a nonprofit dedicated to building partnerships and incubating solutions that efficiently and strategically address infrastructure, transportation, and energy sectors of urban landscapes. This past spring, leaders from Austin, Bellingham, Boston, Charlotte, Cleveland, Guadalajara (Mexico), Mountain View, Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Vancouver (B.C.) met at Ecotrust for the first-ever Ecodistricts Institute to discuss neighborhood-scale planning in their respective cities.

To connect with the summit on social channels follow @pdxinstitute on Twitter and Facebook with hashtages #ecodistrictssummit and #greencities.

 

 

 

By Rob Bennett

Last month, leaders from Austin, Bellingham, Boston, Charlotte, Cleveland, Guadalajara (Mexico), Mountain View, Philadelphia, San Francisco and Vancouver (B.C.) gathered at Ecotrust in Portland for the first-ever EcoDistricts Institute, a meeting to examine neighborhood-scale development projects in each of their cities.

The leaders at the institute are all developing EcoDistricts, which are also known as “green neighborhoods” or “green districts.” EcoDistricts integrate green buildings and smart infrastructure such as energy, water, waste, recycling, transportation with community action and civic entrepreneurism. EcoDistricts can be established within brownfield redevelopment areas, campuses or existing neighborhoods.

Ecodistricts are spread across the continent. Tatiana Mac/Portland Sustainability Institute.

For the participants in the institute – which was funded by generous grants from the Blackstone Ranch Institute and Ecoworks Foundation – being on the forefront of a new era of urban innovation isn’t enough. They want to go faster, and that’s why they came to Portland. Each had an interesting story to tell:

  • Austin is redeveloping a former industrial parcel on the southwest edge of downtown into a mixed-use neighborhood with affordable, dense housing, a new central library, improved transit and preservation of a historic art deco power plant.
  • Bellingham is designing a new waterfront neighborhood on the site of an old paper mill.
  • Boston’s newly minted “Boston Innovation District” is looking to reinvent itself as a center of advanced manufacturing and knowledge companies mixed with community amenities and housing.
  • Charlotte’s South End EcoDistrict is an emerging mixed-use neighborhood filled with innovative small businesses and housing in repurposed industrial buildings.
  • In Cleveland – a tale of two neighborhoods. On the west side, a tired inner-city neighborhood is in the need of new energy and investment, while on the east side, a new urban agriculture innovation zone is slated for farm incubation and related enterprises.
  • Guadalajara’s residents of the Vallarta Sur neighborhood rejected a proposed elevated highway that would split their neighborhood, and instead are transforming their railroad right of way into a “civic park” that will spur revitalization and the creation of a digital business center.
  • Mountain View – a Silicon Valley community endowed with a vibrant downtown and progressive technology companies – is poised to lead the way in sustainable corporate campus development that supports local businesses and a need for new housing.
  • Philadelphia’s South of South Neighborhood is an existing mixed-income area, seeing new growth due to its proximity to the center city.
  • San Francisco’s Central Corridor area is advantageously positioned for dense growth, new transit, district infrastructure and high-tech industry.
  • The University of British Columbia is redeveloping a portion of its abundant land holdings to create new mixed-use neighborhoods. The newest hub is Acadia, planned to accommodate dense housing, amenities, shops and services.

Ten cities, ten stories. The reason for these projects in North America– and dozens more like them around the world – is more apparent than ever: municipal and business leaders must find effective ways to repurpose neighborhoods to take advantage of the growing trends in urbanization (millions of people coming to a city near you in the coming decade) and the changing economy that places a premium on knowledge and innovation. According to leading local economists like Joe Cortright and organizations such as Preservation Green Lab and ArtPlace, the cities that focus on rehabilitating and building vibrant, green and diverse neighborhoods have the best chance of thriving in the future.

After spending three days with over 60 leading green city leaders, I left feeling exhilarated and convinced, more than ever, that we’re on the cusp of an urban sustainability revolution. We are certainly seeing evidence of such a revolution here in Portland. People continue to flock here. Why? We’ve adopted a culture that’s ultimately led to a 26 percent drop in per person carbon emissions since 1990 while the city and economy have grown. This culture has also given rise to a true green economy, and we are becoming known as the city that builds other green cities. We have five EcoDistricts here today, with two more coming online this year. That’s all in addition to the launch of a North American EcoDistricts Pilot Program this year as well.

Even with the economy struggling to rebound and cities facing unprecedented pressure to do more with less, this year is shaping up to be a busy one for the green cities movement.  The timing couldn’t be better.

Rob Bennett is executive director of the Portland Sustainability Institute.

 

By Jens Ambsdorf

In the last twenty years, we have made tremendous progress in imagining ways to create a better, more sustainable world. We see this vision documented in the declarations and guiding principles the UN and other governing bodies have created. But this vision has yet to become reality — how little has changed in the way we approach development.  We are stuck in old habits, old structures, old territorial and ideological thinking that is so deeply rooted in our history that change is too slow to come.

 

The world mapped by bioregion. More at resilienceregions.org/home

The urgency of the agenda for the UN Conference on Sustainable development in Rio this June cannot be understated—we face unprecedented and linked economic and environmental crises, and the delegates in Rio have a tremendous opportunity to address these crises by reshaping the institutions that govern international development. Instead of trying to fix a system that itself is the cause of the dilemma we are in, we have to step out of the box and rethink that system entirely.

National governments are increasingly unable to deliver to their citizens the fundamental services they are designed to offer. The gap between poor and rich, those who have and those who have not, those who participate and those who don’t, is widening worldwide; and that gap is created and strongly enhanced by national politics, taxation, and other factors which effectively restrict choices. Even in established democratic countries, the gap between national governments and the people is widening and participation in traditional political systems is dwindling.

On the local and regional level it seems clear what the goal of governance should be: our own wellbeing and that of our fellow citizens. But on the national level, a constant conflict of interests blurs this fundamental goal and the wellbeing of individuals and communities becomes more and more obscured.

The dwindling power of national governments in comparison to international corporations and financial markets only increases this risk. Today, ever increasing national deficits transform public assets into private profits, and on the flip side, convert private risks into public debts. National and international governance supports the interest of capital and markets against the interests of the people; limiting individual freedom and options for individuals to be active and self-determined parts of society.

We need governance that returns to the commons; governance that rises from its people, and focuses on the fundamental wellbeing of its societies. These fundamental needs are tangible and diverse, and best understood within particular cultures and the regions they inhabit.

The challenges we face are global, but the solutions can only be found on an appropriate scale: the regional scale.

The sense of place and belonging has always been important for human beings.  Our sense of place is rooted in a geographical context and also in how our culture emerges from that place — how our community relates to one another. This is as true for people in the Siberian tundra as it is for people that call New York City their home. This relationship is reciprocal– it is not only that you belong to a place, but that place also belongs to you.

When land and resources no longer belong to the majority, the disconnect between people and place discourages responsible behavior and the stewardship that is needed to support vibrant, healthy societies.

Responsibility without ownership is weak and ownership without responsibility is arbitrary.

Regions are the largest and yet smallest unit that people can feel an active part of. It is where individuals still matter and where ownership and responsibility can still be meaningful. But regionalism in this sense is not only bound to the traditional borders of culture and idioms. It can be far more–varying in size and boundaries depending on the particular characteristics of the land and its culture.

What is a region?

A region in this sense is the dynamic geographical expression of a common set of qualities, conditions, questions, and opinions of people in that area. This definition includes but is not limited to the traditional idea of a region. This traditional approach is mainly territorial and historic and does not reflect the multiple dimensions of human existence today.

Nor does this understanding of regions neglect the need for structure and order.  One of the great advancements of the last century was that on a global scale, we have achieved a broad consensus that demands human rights. We have seen in Somalia, Yugoslavia, Rwanda and elsewhere what the unmediated and complete removal of order and common values creates. It supports the expression of the darkest parts of human behavior and cannot be tolerated. We desperately need good governance on all levels.

National governments have been the cornerstones of global stability in the world as we know it.  But our world has changed and we can’t overcome the challenges we are facing with institutions that are living in the past. Not only do we need to redefine our economic models, but we also need to rebuild our models of governance. To chart the way towards these new models into a future we all want, we need to remap the world.

What does remapping mean?

Remapping is to reconsider our relationship to the places we live. Since the current borders of nations cut through many historical, cultural and bio-geographical landscapes, they are not suitable to address the challenges the current state of the world demands.

Remapping means a radical reorientation centered around people and place, where people take ownership of the places they live. Ownership also implies the ownership of a problem and the responsibility for solving it. Remapping in the first place means people living within their geographical context. At another level, it means to also integrate wider tangible and non-tangible relations.

Bioregions offer a starting point for this approach.

The European Wadden Sea does not end at the borders of Germany, Denmark or the Netherlands, but the political borders result in different management schemes, different rights for land users, different results in the protection of its natural resources. Even while there is a high degree of coordination between those nations, this region could be governed much better if it were mapped by regional, not political boundaries.

Or, if we look at watersheds like the Euphrat that include several nation states, how can it be that one nation consumes the commonly shared resources of all the people up and downstream without even consulting with them? This is clearly unjust.

Similarly, fishing fleets are destroying the future of coastal communities in East Africa for the short-term profit of far distant fleet owners.

On a larger scale we see how the temperate forest ecosystem of the Pacific Northwest of the U.S. and Canada are totally dependent on the current climate pattern that leads to the rainfall and cloudy skies there. This is a long evolved natural pattern that we as humans are currently changing with an uncertain effect.

A regional perspective sheds light on the imbalances of capital flows and resulting economic fragility. Money flows into regions like Africa to capitalize on abundant resources, but the profits flow out just as quickly. Profits are neither reinvested locally or used to offset the social and environmental costs of the activities.

So remapping allows us to better understand where the costs and benefits of economic activities are born between different regions. It can facilitate burden sharing as well as benefit sharing. What is clear from these examples is that the definition of a region has to be broader than a geographical one.

Remapping is not the solution towards a better world. Remapping is a thematic tool and concept that enables us to better understand the context in which we live — the vulnerabilities we face, as well as the opportunities.

And it may contribute answers to the overarching question: how are we going to live on this planet in the future in peace together, well and happy?

Jens Ambsdorf is CEO of the Hamburg-based Lighthouse Foundation.

 

 

 

 

By Tim Gibbins

The Skeena River in northwestern British Columbia is a fabled salmon fishery with many fish-processing plants along its banks. But the company running the newest plant in Thornhill, BC, might surprise you.

It’s Patagonia.

Beginning this week the apparel company launches a bold venture into the food business — Patagonia Provisions Wild Salmon Jerky. The jerky is aimed at outdoorsy folks looking for high protein snacks; it also delivers a strong environmental and community story— in keeping with Patagonia’s industry-leading corporate responsibility.

Once abundant salmon runs on the undammed Skeena River and all along the Pacific coast have greatly diminished. But the Patagonia venture seeks to support selective harvest of particularly healthy runs in the upper reaches of the Skeena.

Skeena River

The Skeena River photo by Sam Beebe

 

The company teamed up with SkeenaWild Conservation Trust, to identify in-river harvesting locations for their salmon. And by partnering with the First Nations to source the salmon through traditional fishing methods such as dip nets, fish wheels, and beach seines, Patagonia’s newly created market will help restore an artisanal fishing economy and locally rooted jobs that tap into the watershed’s deep history.

Lake Babine fishermen work the Skeena photo courtesy of Greg Taylor/SkeenaWild

The Lake Babine Nation that lives at the headwaters of the Skeena, has faced long odds since their fishing economy was severely diminished in 1906 when the Canadian government shut down the inland river fishery in favor of the coastal fishery at the mouth of the Skeena River.

Unemployment now hovers near 50% for many First Nation tribes in the region; the 15 jobs created at Thornhill fish processing plant will give a boost, alongside fishing.

Greg Knox, the executive director of Skeena Wild Conservation Trust, told a reporter recently, “Not only are they bringing significant benefits to their communities, but they are showing the world that these fisheries are sustainable and economically viable. Their location and harvesting techniques allow these fisheries to intercept strong runs while allowing smaller, weaker populations to reach their spawning areas. They are some of the most sustainable salmon fisheries in the world.”

So Patagonia’s new fish processing plant may look like other fish processing plants, but the difference, founder Yvon Chouinard says, is that “The product coming out of there is the cleanest, most responsible, best-tasting fish around.”

See more about this venture in this Skeena video.


Tim Gibbins is a writer and Patagonia employee living in Portland, Ore.

Mar 052012
 

Beginning in 2011, Ecotrust staff have had the opportunity to spend a couple days a month on new and innovative projects for the organization that interest them. A group of us are ready to share one of our first projects.

This idea of allowing time for good ideas to percolate and come from anywhere within the organization isn’t new. Google’s 20% time was popularized in recent years and 3M developed the idea of 15% time for their engineers back in the 1950s. But having time isn’t enough, as many point out. You need a culture of sharing, a ‘marketplace of ideas’. At Ecotrust, we are fortunate to have that within the organization, which is constantly pushing for transformative ideas, and within our building, the Jean Vollum Natural Capital Center (below), which features a whole suite of businesses pursuing a new, restorative economy.

For Ecotrust’s first innovation project, our software team joined with one of our extraordinary cartographers to develop a new workflow for creating and sharing online maps and the data behind them.  We wanted it to be simple, we wanted to allow our developers to work more closely with our cartographers and program staff, and, above all, we wanted beautiful interactive maps that felt less like tools and more like stories. As Ric Young, an Ecotrust Canada board member, once said, “the best story wins.”

We didn’t have to look far for the building blocks to make our idea come to life. Our good friend and former Ecotruster Dane Springmeyer has been doing amazing work with the folks at Development Seed on a project called TileMill, an open source design studio for creating rich interactive maps. Combining TileMill with complementary tools like Modest Maps, Wax and TileStream gave us a complete workflow for publishing maps online.

With our new mapping tools in place we connected with the Whole Watershed Restoration Initiative, an Ecotrust program which brings together federal and state agencies to fund high-priority salmon habitat restoration projects. Together we created an interactive project map that allows people to see WWRI-funded restoration work and to find out whether they fall within a priority area and are eligible for a WWRI grant.

Close-up of interactive map

This first map is just a start and we see a lot of potential for enhancing it further, including incorporating project audio, video and photographs. Going forward we envision using this new suite of tools to showcase Ecotrust’s work across the Pacific Northwest landscape. And there’s huge potential for other organizations to use the tool for geo-based storytelling.

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