Entice, don’t coerce: the pleasures of green by design

  • Things to walk to

    Things to walk to

    Courtesy of Steve Mouzon

  • Gifts to the street

    Gifts to the street

    Gifts to the street are enticing people into the public realm. Courtesy of Steve Mouzon

  • Great civic spaces

    Great civic spaces

    Great civic spaces are providing places for people to gather, places for real community. Courtesy of Steve Mouzon

  • A serviceable place

    A serviceable place

    It’s a very serviceable place because most of the shops and offices are within walking and biking distance to homes. Courtesy of Steve Mouzon

  • Frugal buildings

    Frugal buildings

    The uses can change over time, so the buildings are frugal – like this home that later became a museum. Courtesy of Steve Mouzon

  • Community gardens

    Community gardens

    Courtesy of Steve Mouzon

Hazel Borys, New Urban Network

Living in a century home with passive air and choosing cycling as my primary mode of transportation during this unusually warm summer may sound like hardcore Greenie behavior, but it’s been particularly satisfying.

This enjoyment of a modernized take on methods that have worked for generations has made me pick up Steve Mouzon’s Original Green book again, where he notes:

Delight is often a side effect of buildings that operate naturally for most of the year.

And that’s before the economic, environmental, and social paybacks for my good behaviour. No level of efficiency can ever compare to turning off the equipment. Yet outdoor dining only works when the air conditioning is passive. Or, at least, quiet. Outdoor sleeping only works when the traffic is calmed to a low roar. So while the savings due to less equipment is significant, it also allows all sorts of other enjoyable and effective lifestyle changes.

Original Green is common sense, plainspoken sustainability. It’s the sustainability that has always existed, before the thermostat age. When people had to be green, otherwise they couldn’t live. The newly re-launched Original Green website aggregates, curates, and distributes the wisdom and methods that have worked for the longest time. And provides fun places to talk about how to move these ideas forward, and bring them home.

The other day I was talking with Steve about all of this, and he pointed out that we’re at 6.7 billion people now, heading to 9 billion in most of our lifetimes. So even if we’re all conserving more, our consumption has to drop sharply to keep things level. And level isn’t good. So sustainability can only be reached with a collective — and significant — lifestyle change. Go ahead, call yourself a Greenie. And I’ll call you a survivor. But it might be more hedonistic than you’d think.

Lifestyle change happens easiest from enticement, not coercion. We should be able to choose to be smarter before the larger context coerces us. For the moment, we have a choice — an option for a smarter landing. Our kids might not be so lucky.

So I’ve been walking and cycling the streets of Winnipeg neighbourhoods, always drawn to the ones that adhere to Original Green concepts. Sustainable places are nourishable, accessible, serviceable, and securable. Sustainable buildings are lovable, durable, flexible and frugal. If you want the philosophy behind all that, visit OG Foundations. However, I’ve been thinking about it in terms of a few photos.

Earlier this year, I wrote about Oberlin, and its good college town urbanism that contributes to walkable environments, gathering places, and accessibility. I often meet up with Steve in Oberlin, visiting family, thanks to the fact that he’s my brother as well as fellow urbanist. These photos are all Steve’s, and will be available on Zenfolio soon.

Much of what Oberlin — and other traditional neighbourhoods like it — are doing to be sustainable is probably almost unconscious instead of a big sacrifice.

People are walking more, so conditioning themselves to the weather instead of conditioning their buildings to 70 degrees, thanks to complete streets and plenty of things to walk to (see the images to the right).

What could they be doing better? Like most towns and cities, the urbanism breaks down on the outskirts, where newer zoning makes things more auto-centric. And agriculture – there isn’t much evidence of it being highly nourishable. While there is a strong local food movement from 50 miles, there are only a few community gardens.

What can you be doing in your home, in your neighbourhood, in your city, to be Original Green? These aren’t easy times. So like the “leave a penny, take a penny” habits of sharing, why don’t you share your ideas below?

Outside of my personal habits, what we’re doing is changing the laws to make Original Green legal again. If you want to talk with Steve and me about it, join us next Thursday for a webinar on Getting to Green: Recovering Sustainable Traditions. Or follow the conversation with the #SmartCode hashtag on Twitter.

Hazel Borys is principal and managing director of Placemakers, a planning, coding, marketing, and implementation firm. This article originally appeared on PlaceShakers and NewsMakers.

Comments

I did read your earlier

I did read your earlier article...and how you love Tappan Sqaure. It would have been nice to see some photos of the square and why it works so well. I looked on the internet and could not find any photos readily available.

Are we talking about the same Oberlin?

I understand some for your enchantment with Oberlin, but there are huge improvements needed, like addressing the over 40% of the kids who get free lunches at our schools.  The almost falling down houses on the southeast side of town, the fact that Oberlin High School which only have a little over 300 kids has a high pregnancy rate.  I guess if you have small children and only live in the west end, you may not have seen the Oberlin I have been exposed to.  The poverty, the one parent families and the like..I havent heard it better put than by someone recently that actually worked at the college..Oberlin, a small town with the big town problems....I find that there are problems that are swept under the carpet. ALOT..visit the high school once.  The school has the IB programs now, if you can stand the swearing, the punk stuff of a large majority of the student body.  I guess a bunch of the professors send the kids to Lake Ridge just because of these issues. I for one would expect a world class college to make it mandatory for the public schools located here to be one of the best in the country.  To attract, promote and have a wonderful educational enviroment for all the people here..there is a dark side to this wonderful college town.  Especially when your kids get to be teens..maybe you did not live here long enough to see that..I do agree the landscaping and campus is really pretty!  Then you have to LIVE here..