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Improving Public Health Outcomes through the Development of Networks of Regenerative Rural Villages | book chapter
This chapter challenges the concept of sustainable development, suggesting that healthy development should regenerate natural systems and have a net positive impact on both people and planet. Applying this lens to the UN Sustainable Development Goals shows that improving public health requires not just healthcare, but also provision of clean water and sanitation, clean air through the adoption of clean, renewable energy, access to fresh food, and economic opportunities. A holistic approach to both public health and sustainable development is required to provide all these services and infrastructure. The discussion identifies key principles and design elements for the development of a network of regenerative villages, each of which would include a renewable energy micro-grid, water micro-grid, regenerative agricultural system, and shared electric vehicles, all supporting a built environment where people can live, work and play.
A Circular Economy Approach to designing settlements
The circular economy is said to offer the “world of opportunity to re-think and re-design the way we make stuff”. Could this concept be used to re-design the way we build our cities and neighbourhoods? How might we design places with circular infrastructure—pathways that enable the circulation of products and resources around a neighbourhood?
The death of the city…
It has become commonplace for articles and presentations about cities to start with facts such as that in 1950, 30 per cent of the world’s population was urban and by 2014 that number had reached 54 per cent. Reference to this trend is invariably followed by an assertion that the trend must inevitably continue into the future, suggesting, for example, that by 2050, 66 per cent of the world’s population is projected to be urban. In this article I ask whether we have the courage to question whether this trend is inevitable or, indeed, desirable?
Human settlements arranged as networks of regenerative villages with nature-based infrastructure ecosystems | journal paper
Civil infrastructures have historically been developed as highly centralised, extensive, and complicated systems. Recent advancements in the development of energy micro-grids have opened the possibility of localised, intensive, and complex, nature-based infrastructure ecosystems. The land area required for this approach challenges the orthodoxy of ever-increasing urbanisation, greater density and centralisation of populations in cities. To determine whether centralisation or decentralisation is the optimal strategy we examine research in various disciplines. We argue that a conclusion can be confirmed when different disciplines arrive at that same position. We show that literature in town planning, regional economics, ecological economics, and public health all support the argument for decentralisation reached through civil engineering systems.
Circular Food Futures: What will they look like? | journal paper
This paper explores how circular economy (CE) debates might contribute to, and support, the changes needed for a sustainable future. Full compliance with the three objectives of a CE identified by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation might help to describe a sustainable and circular food future. An analysis of the food system is therefore carried out to determine how food systems may be organised to (a) design out waste and pollution, (b) keep products and materials in use and (c) regenerate natural systems. It is posited that the transition to a fully circular economy will require a paradigm shift—another agricultural revolution—the transition away from large-scale industrial agriculture to a decentralised network of circular food systems
Strategic Planning for a Network of Regenerative Villages | Journal paper
Whilst the energy transition from fossil fuels to renewables offers significant environmental benefits, the other transition – from a centralised to a distributed energy system – underpins a disruptive model for planning cities, towns and villages. This paper asks: Is it inevitable that large cities will keep growing, while rural communities will continue to be deprived of resources and opportunities? Is the flow of people into cities inevitable? By contrasting the current centralising city model with a distributed network of villages, this paper offers ten reasons why the distributed network is preferable to centralisation.