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Locally Sourced House

Over the past few years, we’ve seen a surge of people striving to live the “locavore,” lifestyle. Rather than focus on organic or vegetarian diets, locavores instead focus on geographical proximity, many pledging to only eat foods that have been grown or produced withing 100 miles of their front door.

Now, as GOOD’s Mark Boyer pointed out in a recent article, some locavores are expanding this philosophy to homes as well as food. Of course, growing your own is the easiest way to achieve this goal in regard to food, so it only makes sense that building-your-own would accomplish it in the area of architecture.

Last week, the Architecture Foundation of British Columbia launched an international competition to design a 1,200-square-foot, four-person home that exclusively uses materials made or recycled within 100 miles of Vancouver (also the birthplace of the 100-Mile Diet).

“Historically, most houses were constructed as ’100 mile’ houses from caves, sod houses, log cabins and stone houses to the First Nations’ indigenous cedar houses, tepees and igloos,” reads the competition website. “People worldwide used whatever available materials were at hand to build shelters for themselves and their families. But is this possible in a modern 21st Century city like Vancouver? This competition will challenge all participants to rethink the way we live and select materials, systems and technology that reflect this reality in the world of computers, the internet, Facebook, etc…  Participants are encouraged to challenge the logic of the present, formulate new questions, and explore variations that will allow new potentials for living.”

This is a global competition. Architects, designers, artists, students and other environmentally conscious creators from around the world are encouraged to submit their ideas. If you’ve got big ideas about how to live efficiently off of the materials available in your own region, think about registering!

Image Credit: Flickr/locosteve



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How fast and far we’ve come in the advancement of technology! A mere century ago, the U.S. was industrializing rapidly–and creating new technologies to speed assembly, improve communication, increase leisure time, and make work and life all-around more efficient. 

It’s more efficient now. Like, 24/7 efficient.

Now we stare into screens by day and night. We have SMS conversations under the dinner table on dates. We wake in the middle of the night to harvest fictional Farmville crops. We still somehow fit in 6 hours of television. Portlandia’s technology loop is funny because it’s real.

If this is not an addiction, can you give it up? Can you disconnect the computer, the phone (it’s smart, after all), the TV, even the GPS? Are your hands, still clutching your iPad and Blackberry, getting clammy just thinking about it? March 23-24 is National Day of Unplugging, and it’s a great opportunity to disconnect from devices and reconnect to your family, your mate, your health and your free time.

Signs that National Day of Unplugging is taking off are evident in the fact that this year the movement  is going to the most plugged-in place in the country: South By Southwest in Austin, Texas. At SXSW Interactive’s first ever Unplugged Party at the Lodge, the price of admission is checking your cell phone. And if you’ve been to SXSW or know the demographic, you know that if this crowd can unplug, anyone can. At the event, entrepreneurs and tech titans will share their secrets to unplugging, and how they gain more power and time in their day-to-day lives by creating sacred “no connection” time every week.

If you have to really get away to make your detox work, just know it might cost you a pretty penny. Caribbean nation St. Vincent and the Grenadines is offering travelers the chance to leave smartphones and tablets behind as part of a new tech-weening vacation package. The package comes with a guidebook and a life coach so you don’t have to go it alone. In Ukiah, California, a program called the Digital Detox offers retreats complete with yoga and hot springs off-the-grid. The real doozie for domestic top-of-the-line disconnection accommodations is the Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur, CA. At $2285 a night, rooms pointedly don’t come with TVs.

With wifi and smart phones spurring the spread of connectivity and coverage, in the future it may become increasingly difficult to truly go “off the grid.” How much could be gained, though, by the time away from devices? Memories might be sharper, conversations deeper, work less distracted. It’s worth taking the time to find out, if only to reassure ourselves we can.

Stay tuned to Insteading.com–in March I’ll attempt a weekend-long tech vacation and, of course, blog about my findings afterwards. 


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Public Garden Plot

Self-sufficiency is a big part of living a more sustainable lifestyle. When you’re not dependent on others for your food, water, energy, clothes, or entertainment, you have more control over how those things are grown, purified, and produced.

Over the past few years, we’ve seen individuals become self-sufficient by growing their own food or going off-grid through renewable energy, but rarely have we seen an entire town support the idea of long-term food independence the way the small Victorian mill town of Todmorden, West Yorkshire has.

Citizens in the town have rallied behind an effort called “Incredible Edible,” a program and website dedicated to making the town of Todmorden food-independent by 2018.

Todmorden Garden Beds

To that end, townspeople have constructed raised vegetable, fruit and flower garden beds on almost every available nook of groundspace throughout the town. There are plots in front of the police station, the railway station, and even down by the canal. Citizens are invited to help themselves to whatever happens to be in season in the beds, at absolutely no cost.

Incredible Edible is also about much more than plots of veg, writes Wake Up World, it’s also about educating people about food, and stimulating the local economy.

There are lessons in pickling and preserving fruits, courses on bread-making, and the local college is to offer a BTEC in horticulture. The thinking is that young people who have grown up among the street veg may make a career in food.

The Incredible Edible effort has also helped to stimulate the local economy, as now local cafes and restaurants can source many of their ingredients from right within the city limits.

Top Image Credit: Flickr – vicki moore


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Off-Grid Home

Industrious people content to live low-impact lifestyles in the California desert are being forced to destroy their homes and move off of their property because the Country says they are a “nuisance.”

Many of us dream about building our own, off-grid homes in the middle of nowhere. But for people living in the harsh desert east of Los Angeles, that dream has turned into a nightmare.

As shown in the video, the government is now making SWAT type raids and levying heavy fines against poor people in an effort to force then off of their land for what many would consider minor issues. (The clip is almost 10 minutes long, but well worth the time).

H/T to Earthbagbuilding

Image Credit: Flickr – tswind

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 Featured Image Credit: Flickr – stoat50

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When someone mentions living “off the grid,” what do you picture? Most people see a remote location, with a small, ultra-efficient house, and no one else around for miles. For many years, this was exactly how off-grid home solar systems were used: as a way to generate power for those who lived in an area where no power lines existed.

As the world’s population grows, however, it’s increasingly hard to find a place to live where power lines haven’t already been installed. Additionally, there are millions of people living in cities around the world that want to experiment with off-grid living without moving out of the urban areas they know and love.

Luckily, it is still possible to generate your own electricity whether you live in the middle of town, or the middle of nowhere. To decide which is better for you, it’s essential to know the difference between off-grid and grid-tied home solar systems. Each has its own benefits and challenges, but both will help reduce your energy costs and improve the environment.

Off-Grid Home Solar Systems

An off-grid solar system means that you are 100 percent reliant on the power generated by your own solar panels.

  • Advantages of an off-grid solar include lack of electricity bills, freedom from rate hikes, and the knowledge that you’ll be able to enjoy power in most emergency situations.
  • Disadvantages of an off-grid solar system include the need for large battery storage banks, a lack of power if there’s no sun for more than a few days, and no emergency power if inclement weather were to damage or destroy your system.

Grid-Tied Home Solar Systems

A grid-tied home solar system means that solar power is your default power source, but the home is still connected to a municipal power supply.

  • Advantages of a grid-tied solar system include the flexibility that comes from having a secure source of backup power. Excess power generated by home solar system can be fed back into the grid, and net metering can actually turn your meter backwards, earning you profit from the power company. If, during an emergency or inclement weather, you need to draw on grid-based electricity, the cost is lowered as a result or may even be free.
  • The main disadvantage of a grid-tied system is the need to live close to power transmission lines.

Does your home run on solar power? Tell us why you chose an off-grid or grid-tied system in the comments!

About the author: Lorna Li is Editor in Chief of Green Marketing TV and Entrepreneurs For a Change, where she enjoys writing about green business and marketing.

Related Reading:

5 Ways You Can Get Paid To Power Your Home

Smart Meters: Changing The Way We Power Our Homes

Solar Leasing Programs Increase Access To Clean Energy

Image Credit: Flickr – Living Off Grid

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