community
Submitted by VicDesotelle on Wed, 2008-11-26 03:22.
From the site http://ChangingNormal.com
CONCEPT 2 of 2:
Creating an Open Design Matrix for Realizing New Forms of Sustainable Innovation
The creation of 64 globally-aligned incubation centers are used to realize new and advanced forms of design and innovation relating to organizational practices and technologies that are symbiotic with natural rhythms and planetary culture. This innovation matrix will help to advance the design of communities using ‘whole system’ knowledge that is realized within the centers and shared world-wide. Ecological design principles and sustainable business practices are followed that adapt to the needs of a globally conscious society. An eighteen community domain learning framework is
used, along with a unique concentrix management process, to direct the centers within the innovation matrix. Collaborative learning methods are used to guide participants to create product and service solutions that support a diverse, interdependent, thriving world culture system.
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The web link below will show you draft concepts that will direct the manifestation of these amazing new 'learning communities' and 'sustainable innovation' networks. I believe that these approaches hold seeds for realizing a world culture that is based in reverence, peace, and awe to emerge. It will unfold an exciting new journey for all of us; a new way for humanity to live and evolve.
http://www.wholesysteminnovation.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-search.cgi?Inclu...
I want you to contact me for further dialog. Or build on this discussion. What are your thoughts, interests, ideas, suggestions, creations?
I can be reached as per below ...
Vic Desotelle
Facilitating Collaborative Design
831-454-8046
http://DiscoveryFuel.com]
http://WholeSystemInnovation.com/BLOG
http://www.wholesysteminnovation.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-search.cgi?Inclu...
Also see the following 'Discussion Title' subject:
Building a World-wide Network of Learning Communities
Submitted by VicDesotelle on Wed, 2008-11-26 03:20.
From http://ChangingNormal.com
Concept 1 of 2:
Building a World-wide Network of Learning Communities
I would like to see a unique form of collaboration and design network occur across the world. Its creation will be comprised of a model for bringing people together with common passions and interests who want to participate in the changes at hand, both at the visionary and practical levels of implementation. The frameworks for gathering and connecting people will be very open, allow for group and individual empowerment, be guided by principles of sustainability and collaborative learning, and allow those with knowledge and wisdom to lead rather than those with (so-called) power strength and money, and (rather than our present unhealthy forms for discussing and debating) it will be based on an open dialogue system for sharing and learning from a world of people who are wealthy with ideas. Together, from community-to-community, we will create a wonderful new reality.
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The web link below will show you draft concepts that will direct the manifestation of these amazing new 'learning communities' and 'sustainable innovation' networks. I believe that these approaches hold seeds for realizing a world culture that is based in reverence, peace, and awe to emerge. It will unfold an exciting new journey for all of us; a new way for humanity to live and evolve.
http://www.wholesysteminnovation.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-search.cgi?Inclu...
I want you to contact me for further dialog. Or build on this discussion. What are your thoughts, interests, ideas, suggestions, creations?
I can be reached as per below ...
Vic Desotelle
Facilitating Collaborative Design
831-454-8046
http://DiscoveryFuel.com]
http://WholeSystemInnovation.com/BLOG
http://www.wholesysteminnovation.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-search.cgi?Inclu...
Also see the following 'Discussion Title' subject:
Creating an Open Design Matrix for Realizing New Forms of Sustainable Innovation
Submitted by admin on Fri, 2007-03-30 20:56.
By ANDREW GLAZER, Associated Press Writer on 12:12 PM PDT, August 31, 2006
LOS ANGELES -- A community of squat, futuristic domes once billed as a utopian refuge from life on the streets is itself facing homelessness.
The silvery, igloo-like fiberglass structures, packed tightly on a downtown lot, are being sold online to the highest bidder.
Such is the unceremonious end to Dome Village -- activist Ted Hayes' model of a self-governed, self-sufficient community for the homeless. Since its founding in 1993, the village has been visited by celebrities but has gone largely unnoticed by thousands of commuters buzzing past on the freeway nearby.
Hayes said a big rent increase -- from $2,500 to $18,330 per month -- is forcing the village from its site near the downtown Staples Center. The partnership that owns the land said the increase reflects soaring downtown property values.
Residents were saddened by the decision to sell. They must leave by October.
"We have such a family here," said Graham Foster, 51, a former nightclub manager who arrived three years ago after living several months in a battered motor home. "Closing down is almost like an explosion."
When Dome Village was founded 13 years ago, Hayes envisioned a cooperative of 30 homeless working and living together, and counseling each other through tough times.
About 450 people have occupied the village over the years, living in the domes and using community kitchen, laundry and bathroom facilities on the site. Families and singles alike planted gardens, paid $70 a month in rent and divided chores on the 1.25-acre lot, which was once choked with weeds that grew neck-high through cracks in the asphalt.
Proceeds from the eBay auction will help replicate the village elsewhere in Los Angeles, Hayes said. In the meantime, families have been placed in shelters across the city.
Bids started at $3,000 per structure. The domes can be broken down to fit into the back of a pickup truck.
Hayes, a Republican, blamed politics for the village's demise. He said Democratic landlords raised the rent two days after he appeared at a meeting of a Bel Air Republican women's club. A lawyer for the landlords denied politics were at play.
"It's just not financially viable for us to allow them to remain there," attorney Mike Sidley said.
About 90,000 people -- including 10,000 children -- are homeless in Los Angeles County on any given night, according to estimates by the homeless services authority.
Dome Village was built with the help of a $250,000 grant from the Los Angeles-based oil company Atlantic Richfield. It was seen as an innovative approach to downtown's intractable homeless problem. Over the years, Prince Edward of England, Denzel Washington and the Beastie Boys visited the site, according to the online advertisement.
Brushes with celebrity did not immediately translate into bids. As of Thursday afternoon, no one had made an offer on any of the 14 domes for sale.
domevillage.org
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