Category: Resilience

Charrette: A Social Innovation Lab

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
When you think social innovation, you might think micro loans in developing countries, or hand-ups to help people in from the fringes here at home. Or a wide range of ways to build social capital or how charitable institutions backstop community with philanthropy. But for those of you who are working in the city planning... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Coding for Character: Doing away with the zoned out nature of our cities

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Having lived in six 100-year-old homes over the last 25 years, autumn always makes me carefully consider what it takes to keep these beautiful elders operational and up-to-date. As we were going through the process of winterizing this year, I am reminded of our recent attempt to modernize by making one small addition that... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Take These Jobs and…
(You know the rest)

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
Cheerleaders for American business used to get peeved when cynics contorted a quote by General Motors CEO Charles Erwin Wilson in 1953. The popular, misinterpreted version: “What’s good for General Motors is good for the country.” What Wilson actually said: “I thought what was good for our country was good for... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Community Ties in the Era of Isolation

Scott Doyon
Scott Doyon Twitter Instagram Facebook
Looking back over my years of writing for Placeshakers, I notice two themes that keep surfacing: First, we’re better off taking an active role in shaping the forces of community change than we are pretending that immunity to change is a legitimate or viable option; and second, connected communities are far better positioned... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Heart of the Arctic: Reflections

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Being back in the south for a couple weeks has given me a chance to reflect on the Adventure Canada Heart of the Arctic expedition. The biggest imprints are three things: the inclusivity of the people, the vastness of the land, and the need to continue to do all we can to develop in compact settlement patterns as one of... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Remember that Katrina Cottages thing? Whatever happened to that?

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
This is the second of two parts addressing Hurricane Katrina 10 years after the storm. The first looked at issues in New Orleans. This one focuses on one hoped-for innovation in the storm’s wake in Coastal Mississippi. Right about now, a couple and their two children are getting much-needed affordable housing help... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Katrina ‘Ten Years After’: And the band plays on

Ben Brown
Ben Brown
I guess it says something about where I am on life’s conception-to-compost journey that the phrase “Ten Years After” evokes a forgettable British group from the late ‘60s and early ‘70s. But, hey, let’s at least credit Alvin Lee with capturing a timeless sentiment in his lyrics for the band’s 1971 hit, “I’d... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Kangerlussuaq: Heart of the Arctic Day 13

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Wednesday, July 29, 2015 After sailing up one of the longest fjords in the world, the delightfully scenic Söndre Strömfjord, we disembarked Ocean Endeavour for the last time, to explore the community of Kangerlussuaq. One group went off for a walk on the ice cap and the other on a nature hike, before we flew out of... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Itilleq: Heart of the Arctic Day 12

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Tuesday, July 28, 2015 We crossed the Arctic Circle at 07:37 today! Early in the day, we landed at Itilleq, a tiny community of 97 people, set in a hollow between two hillsides. Itilleq means hollow. The tiny colorful wooden homes are a complete switch from Canada’s Arctic communities, here arranged as compactly... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk

Nuuk: Heart of the Arctic Day 10

Hazel Borys
Hazel Borys Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
Sunday, July 26, 2015 We docked in Nuuk, the capital of Greenland, around dawn. We had successfully crossed the Davis Strait, formed 65 million years ago by a rift, thanks to a massive movement in the earth’s crust. Our landform today was a peninsula, which is what the word “Nuuk” means, or some would say that... Continue Reading
asteriskasteriskasterisk
1 2 3 4 5 6 9 10 11 12