[Sdpg] South Africa EcoBuilding Tour Nov-Dec 2003
Wesley Roe and Marjorie Lakin Erickson
lakinroe at silcom.com
Thu Aug 28 07:09:21 PDT 2003
Hello all,
Please forward this to anyone you think might be interested, or perhaps you
might want to come along yourself!
Thanks,
Joe Kennedy
New South Africa In-Depth Reality Tour Will Produce a Model EcoHomestead
Cost: $1,750 including food, lodging, ground transport and course fees.
Air travel not included.
Dates: November 10- December 1, 2003
The tour is available for non-New College students, and space is still
available.
For more information, contact: Joe Kennedy, 707-568-3092
jkennedy at newcollege.edu
Linking indigenous knowledge systems with modern technologies, U.S students
will join South African students and farm workers this November in
designing an EcoHomestead at the Tlholego Development Project (TDP) in
South Africa.
Intending to be one solution to the severe housing crisis in South Africa,
this project will be the final phase of an in-depth reality tour of the New
South Africa sponsored by New College of California, Builders Without
Borders and the Sustainability Institute at TDP in November of this year.
The tour will start in Capetown, and over seven days will visit examples of
traditional architecture, new sustainability projects, and reality checks
of harsh townships realities, and the innovations that some residents are
undertaking to address them.
Focusing on the needs, but more importantly, on the exciting solutions to
the severe housing crisis in South Africa, this tour will be an opportunity
for U.S. students to immerse themselves in the wide variety of cultures,
geographies and living circumstances in South Africa, as well as an
opportunity to put in place some of the best thinking in a collaborative
effort between the sponsoring organizations to create the ecohomestead with
full water, power, waste and food self-reliance, using local materials and
native skills. This homestead will eventually form the seed of a small
ecovillage to serve the housing needs of the rural poor including farm
workers and the proliferation of AIDS orphans throughout South Africa.
Joe Kennedy, New College of California faculty and co-founder of Builders
Without Borders, and Paul Cohen of TDP and the Sustainability Institute in
South Africa have collaborated for ten years in creating the Tlholego
Center in order to work toward sustainable solutions to the South African
housing crisis. The EcoHomestead project is designed as a course for
students and interested members of the public from the US and South Africa.
The design will focus on creating a holistic model using forms desirable
by the South African people, but using materials and skills available
locally. The design will build on an ongoing process at TDP that has
benefited from continual feedback about social and practical
considerations. The resulting structure will be completed by interns and
local workers, and will remain as a component of a future ecovillage for
farm workers.
This model, with alterations, could also be used for educational
facilities, ecotourism developments and housing for special populations
such as AIDS orphans.
As a result of this trip, Kennedy and Cohen hope to: create a coalition
that can continue to work together to further sustainability education in
South Africa and the U.S.; initiate a best practices model for
sustainable homestead development for the Southern Africa context; explore
the possibilities for an ongoing annual learning program between the US and
South Africa; and educate and empower students and others about South
Africa, sustainability and ecological development.
Tour and Course Details
Introduction to South African Sustainability Issues
The course will begin with an intensive introduction to political, social
and geographical issues of South Africa from an ecological perspective.
This introduction will be held at the Sustainability Institute, an
organization dedicated to studying these issues. This brief time will
include some visits to local sites in and around Cape Town, including:
·Robben Island, the site of apartheid-era imprisonments.
·Cape Town, a beautiful burgeoning city on the tip of Africa.
·Cape Flats, the harsh reality just outside of Cape Town, where many people
live in dire poverty.
·Ecological development projects in the region to be determined.
Sustainability Tour of South Africa
After completion of the introductory session at the Sustainability
Institute, students and staff from New College and the Tlholego Development
Project will embark upon a 7-day driving tour of South Africa, taking them
on a winding route through the country to visit sites of ecological, social
and political importance. While an exact itinerary has yet to be
determined, these sites will include:
· Areas of ecological importance. Several game preserves and areas of
unique ecological importance lay upon the tour route. Students will get
the opportunity to experience the ecological richness of South Africa.
· Areas of political reality. Part of the tour will bring us through
former apartheid-era homelands where many people still live in dire
poverty. We will also visit townships, such as Soweto, which demonstrate
the harsh urban realities for many South Africans. We will, however, seek
projects of hope within these places, where people are doing the work of
creating an ecological future.
· Areas of traditional life. Parts of South Africa still exemplify a
traditional, land-based way of life. We will seek out traditional
villages, and meet people who carry on ancient building, farming and
cultural traditions. Our tour may bring us through Lesotho, an independent
country within the borders of South Africa that has traditional areas still
intact.
· Areas of ecological development. We will visit several Ecovillages,
permaculture demonstration sites, and other sustainable developments, in
order to see what the people on the cutting edge of sustainability are up to.
We hope through this tour to create linkages between groups and projects
that may hitherto be unaware of each other, and by so doing broaden the
impact of our journey.
EcoHomestead Course
Completing the time in South Africa will be a service learning project at
the Tlholego Development Project (TDP) near Rustenburg. Tlholego is an
award-winning site of many innovative sustainable development innovations
over the last ten years, and a globally-recognized teacher-training center
for sustainable technologies. Joseph Kennedy of New College and BWB and
Paul Cohen (TDP) have been colleagues in the creation of this center for
over ten years.
The course to be held at TDP will focus on the design and building of an
EcoHomestead, which links indigenous knowledge systems with modern
technologies to create a fully-self sufficient model home and food
production landscape designed as a solution to the housing crisis currently
facing South Africa.
This course will be a design and building course focusing on sustainable
solutions to housing issues such as:
· Building materials and design
· Water collection and treatment
· Power production and passive solar design
· Waste treatment
· Food security landscaping
The course will focus on creating a holistic model using forms desirable
by the South African people, but using materials and skills available
locally. The design will build on an ongoing process at TDP that has
benefited from continual feedback about social and practical
considerations. The resulting structure will be completed by interns and
local workers after the course, and will remain as a component of a future
ecovillage for farmworkers. This model, with alterations, could also be
used for educational facilities, ecotourism developments and housing for
special populations such as AIDS orphans.
This project has been partially underwritten by a generous grant from the
Foundation for Sustainability and Innovation
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