Source Green offers sustainable news, movie and book reviews, success stories and practical solutions from our "Road To Green" series. For more information on Source Green, please visit our What We Believe page.
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Hawaii Gateway Energy Center - May 3, 2010 by Millard

Good afternoon folks.

Today I am highlighting a very innovative architectural project on the big island of Hawaii. It was among the Top Ten green projects for the American Institute of Architects in 2007, and has the kind of features architects just love to geek over.

Possibly the most interesting feature is the passive cooling system, which employs air drawn over cold seawater pumped from 3000 below sea level. The air flow is generated passively through stack ventilation. The project is definitely worth a look.

Remember everyone, buy local or grow it yourself!

Love to all,

Millard

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EcoVillage Spotlight: Terramor Village, Orange County, CA - April 22, 2010 by Millard

Good morning folks.

I was looking all morning for the right ecovilage video, and I settled on Terramor because it was the cleanest and best developed idea. They are doing so many things right here – water efficiency, energy efficiency, building a sense of community, and even growing some fruits and vegetables – a very impressive, well conceived development.

I feel guilty though, because I passed up some ecovillage videos who adopted far more completely the idea of sustainability, but to be honest they looked slummy. Am I being elitist or judgmental when I disregard the message of the community because of the untidiness, weeds and the starchild demeanor of the community member being interviewed? These hippie-like communities are fantastic in that they really get sustainability, but even for a devoted environmentalist, there is something off-putting about the commune quality of these villages.

The good news is that the cutting edge environmentally sensitive communities built by the big developers are slowly starting to move toward real green, and the more grass roots ecovillages are getting better at addressing the needs and comfort requirements of people in the 21st century. One note for grass roots ecovillages: if you are going to be doing a YouTube video on your community, have the sense to weed the place before you shoot.

Remember everyone, buy local or grow it yourself!

Love to all,
Millard

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Sky Farming - March 13, 2010 by Millard

Sustainable hihgrise with wind energy generation and hydroponic gardening, design competition, Vancouver, British ColumbiaGood afternoon folks.

I am very busy with integrating facebook with this blog and doing internal upgrades here, but I wanted to share with you one of the many fantastic proposed high rise sustainable projects. Mark my words: this type of project is going to be the norm very soon. Cities and buildings must become producers, not just consumers. My latest research has indicated to me that traditional horizontal monocrop farming is not sustainable. Ecosystems thrive on diverse plant species interwoven together, as anyone who is familiar with permaculture will know.

I foresee high-rise downtown condos with entire floors dedicated to hydroponic agriculture, solar and wind energy generation, and animal husbandry. That is right. You will see pigs and chickens in high rises in a few years.

Remember to take a look at the first section of the book draft I am working, Sustainability: The Big Picture.

Love to all,

Millard

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What We Believe - March 5, 2010 by Millard

Kauai Waterfall with rainbowSource Designs is the result of long years of practice, study, and a lot of trial and error. I conceived the fellowship as something that was one package, yet at the same time encompassing many ideas. Some of the ideas may be off-putting to people who may be attracted to portions of the Source Designs message, but I feel all of the components of Source Designs are necessary for the fellowship to be able to participate in creating true sustainability.

Here are the principles of Source Designs, which I have included on the Source Designs about page. I would like to expand upon them a little more here, so that people who are interested can understand the mission.

1. The design and geometry of a space affect the energy flow of a space, which in turn affects how that space is experienced

As soon as I wrote the term energy flow, I envisioned many eyes rolling over at the thought of an idea as intangible as “energy flow”. Yet understanding energy is essential to creating beautiful space, and this has been understood by most cultures for thousands of years. It is fundamental to the 3000+ year practice of Feng Shui, which is essentially the consious sculpting of space to maximize harmonious energy flow.

Recent discoveries in quantum physics have also supported the idea that our reality is supported by an underlying substrate of subtle energy, which again has been described as qi, prana and a variety of other monnikers for thousands of years by several ancient cultures.

A simple visualizing experiment will illustrate what I mean when I talk about energy flow, geometry and how these affect how a space is experienced.

First, imagine yourself in a square room, say 15′ long  x15′ wide x15′ tall. The color of the wall is neutral, and there are no windows or decoration. Imagine yourself going to the center of the room and sensing what the symmetrical geometry of the room makes you feel. At first you will probably say nothing, because the energy being shaped is very subtle, but being in the center of a square room will most likely make most people feel quiet or in stasis.

Now, imagine yourself in another room, only this room is long and narrow. Let’s make the dimensions of this room 30′ long x 5′ wide x 10′ tall. Go to the center of this room and sense how you feel. The energy here is moving and your feeling experience of this space will be totally different from the square room. In the square room the energy is quiet and balanced, while in the room shaped like a hallway creates a sense of motion and direction.

The geometry of any given space affects the sublte energy contained within that space, and the art of architecture in its ideal is sculpting space  to create  harmonious energy flow. Very simple. Energy flow is harmonious when it is going neither too fast nor too slow, but at a medium pace in gentle meandering curves. The ideas very briefly summarized her are far more complex than this outline, and it is the very core of creating beautiful space.

2. Designers and builders have a responsibilty to create buildings and infrastructures that are self-sustaining, at least at the bioregional level.

This responsibility actually extends beyond designers and builders to include officals at the local, state and federal level. A given population in a given bioregion or watershed must be able to produce subsistence level amounts of food, water and energy without need for replenishment of resources outside the bioregion. Any other situation puts the bioregion and the population in a very comprimised postion that is subject to many calamities, both natural and manmade.

Additionally the whole idea of “waste” must go away. There is no waste in a sustainable world. There are only byproducts to be reused or recycled in another part of the societal  living system. There is far more to be said on this subject, but this is the most tangible and quantifiable part of sustainability – the basic self sufficiency of our bioregions. It does not mean isolationism. It means independence that will lead to positive, synergistic interdependence, not ankle grabbbing dependence.

3. Beautiful environments and life quality are intrinsic to sustainability

It’s unfortunate that this has to be spelled out for so many people, but I think that the vast majority of our civilization has lived at the basic survival level for so long, that most of us have forgotten just how important deep environmental beauty is. I am not talking about about superficial aesthetics. I am tallking something that starts right in the bone marrow and radiates outward. True beauty is masterful functionality, simple, elegant elements, performing multiple functions and looking good doing it. I may have written this before, and if  you read a lot of my work, you will probably see this again: If it isn’t pleasing aesthetically and functionally, it isn’t worth sustaining.

4. Compassion unlocks all doors, and is the only foundation that lasts.

Ultimately all I can speak to is my experience. I have crawled under quite a few rocks trying to figure out what makes this world tick. Christianity, Buddhism, Islam, The Qabbala, Hindu, Scientology….I studied them all trying to arrive at some formula for perfect happiness. What I learned is that there is none. The Wizard Of Oz is just an old man with a balloon, and he didn’t give anything to the tinman that he didn’t already have. Our minds love to create formulas and models and plans, and we often end up chasing the carrot of these mental creations our whole lives.

It wasn’t until I concsiously opened my heart to compassionate love for the whole universe that I felt the world shift beneath me. Something happened in my heart, not my mind, and I have never been the same. I have come to realize that my endeavors which our grounded in true compassion cannot help but succeed. The true matrix, the innermost substrate of the universe is compassion, and when you align yourself with this force, everything else seems so small.

It has been an honor and a pleasure to have founded Source Designs, and I sincerely hope that those of you who read this check back often, because the is growing ripe for companies and ideas like Source Designs, and we are just getting started.

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Under Construction…. - February 19, 2010 by Millard

Illustration of workmen figuratively putting together a website
Source Designs is a vey growing and evolving idea, and as such our website is constantly being changed and upgraded. While the core of our services revolve around helping people create sustainability through smarter and more efficient buildings, Source Designs encompasses a much larger portion of the sustainability spectrum. So if you see some things that may seem incomplete or incongruous on our website, it is because we feel very strongly about approaching the challenge of sustainable building from a holistic point of view, and we haven’t gotten around to updating everything.

In the old and now dying paradigm, individual disciplines like architecture, civic planning and wastewater management were very compartmentalized. However we can no longer afford to separate and isolate the various components of our infrastructure and the professionals who build them. Additionally we all need to have some knowledge about where our food comes from, where our water comes from, where our energy comes from and where our waste goes.

As such the subject matter is vast and requires a great deal of time to properly assimilate and organize. The state of our site represents this process, and for that we apologize. It will be getting better every day though, and we will have great free sustainability information, as well sustainable products and ways to set up local green groups. So please be patient with us, and we will deliver.

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