26-27 July 2011: Critical Mass On-line Planning Institute of Australia Conference
26-27 July , 2011: Critical Mass On-line Planning Institute of Australia Conference Ideas and Innovation – One Planet Communities
Edward Niembro, OPC Australia representative, will give a presentation on the successful One Planet Communities program that is creating ‘green’ flagship communities around the world.
To join the online conference, please click here.
BioRegional wins Social Entrepreneur of the Year
Today, BioRegional’s co-founders are two of five social entrepreneurs being awarded the title of Social Entrepreneur of the Year during the 2011 World Economic Forum on Europe and Central Asia in Vienna, Austria, taking place on 8-9 June. The Social Entrepreneur of the Year awards are being led by Hilde Schwab, Co-Founder and Chairperson of the Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship, following the opening plenary of the forum.
BioRegional’s co-founders Sue Riddlestone and Pooran Desai will join a group of leading social entrepreneurs from across Europe and will be active participants providing insights on sustainability and social innovation in the discussions under the meeting’s theme Expanding the Frontiers of Innovation. A dedicated session “Ecosystems for Social Innovation” will bring together civil society and the public and private sectors to share experiences and explore potential opportunities to strengthen and replicate successful models throughout Europe and Central Asia.
“Social entrepreneurs are the driving force behind the innovations that improve the quality of life of individuals around the world,” explained Mirjam Schoening, Head of the Schwab Foundation. “While the primary focus of social entrepreneurs is to make a specific change in one area, such as access to education, affordable housing or unemployment, social entrepreneurs’ approach to delivering a social impact, which uses innovative and effective business models and cross-sector collaborations, has inspired change among governments and in the private sector alike. In effect, social entrepreneurs are not only delivering change to their constituents, they are also transforming the way governments and companies serve their constituents.”
Winners working in France, Germany and the United Kingdom are among 19 Social Entrepreneurs taking part in the meeting, providing an on-the-ground perspective to sustainability and social innovation.
The following five winners have been selected as 2011 Social Entrepreneurs in Europe:
Sue Riddlestone and Pooran Desai – BioRegional – United Kingdom
BioRegional invents and delivers real-life sustainable communities and businesses. This includes partnering in Peabody’s multi-award-winning BedZED eco-village in London where BioRegional has its main base and seven companies including clean tech for the paper industry and local charcoal supplies to national retailers. BioRegional developed the “one planet living” sustainability design and delivery framework out of their practical experience which is now being used by manufacturers, retailers, local authorities and events such as the London 2012 Olympics and in fifty countries around the world. BioRegional has sister organisations or representative offices in North America, China, Greece, Mexico, Australia and South Africa.
Juergen Griesbeck – Streetfootballworld – Germany
Millions of young people around the world are born into a cycle of social injustice with little opportunity to break out. Through the love of football, streetfootballworld brings individuals and organizations together behind a common goal: empowering young people to rise above their circumstances.
Norbert Kunz – iq consult – Germany
Iq consult seeks to lower unemployment, especially in the eastern parts of Germany, by training, mentoring and funding unemployed and disadvantaged people who are looking to become self-employed.
Laurent Laïk – Groupe La Varappe – France
Groupe La Varappe creates jobs in the south of France for people who have been excluded from society. Groupe La Varappe is composed of two main organizations. One is focused on finding temporary employment for people with minimal qualifications. The other organization focuses on three environmental areas: construction and gardening, waste and renewable energies.
About the Schwab Foundation
The Schwab Foundation for Social Entrepreneurship was co-founded by Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum, and his wife, Hilde. Since its inception in 2000, the Foundation has been identifying the world’s leading social entrepreneurs in over 50 countries around the globe. Selected social entrepreneurs of the Schwab Foundation network participate in World Economic Forum events, thus providing unique opportunities for them to connect with business, political and media leaders.
www.schwabfound.org
Speaking at Tedx Oxbridge – Business as unusual
4th June 2011, Oxford
BioRegional’s co-founders are speaking at TEDxOxbridge – an event bringing together over 20 notable activists, business mavericks, designers, engineers, musicians, politicians, and scientists to share their ideas worth spreading. Over 250 carefully-chosen attendees will be coming from both Oxford and Cambridge universities and their networks to explore how commerce, science, technology, and the humanities can collaborate to redraw the lines of business.
The event will take place all day Saturday, June 4th, 2011 at Said Business School in Oxford. Presentations and performances will range from 4 to 18 minutes in length, leaving plenty of space for networking and overflow conversations with fellow attendees and speakers. Afterward, there will be a drinks reception followed by self-organized topical dinners with speakers, and a late-night after-party featuring two DJ guests.
In person tickets for the event are now sold out but you can watch the talks on a big screen for free at the nearby Jamfactory and get tickets for the after party.
http://tedxoxbridge.com/guest-registration
Modelling Mata de Sesimbra’s Ecological Footprint
BioRegional is in the process of completing ecological footprint modelling for Portugal’s Mata de Sesimbra One Planet Community , and we are unearthing some very interesting results and challenges, such as – How many holidays would a sustainable resource budget allow a European resident?
Located just south of Lisbon, Mata de Sesimbra is a €1 billion integrated development from Greenwoods Ecoresorts, which brings together permanent and holiday accommodation, a nature conservation and forestation program and a sustainable transportation concept.
The findings
BioRegional has modelled the potential ecological footprint of three types of people:
- a permanent family of 4
- a ‘second home’ family travelling from a number of destinations;
- a family coming for a short holiday.
For permanent residents, initial modelling suggests that it would be possible to live within a One Planet ecological footprint budget. One of the biggest challenges in achieving this surrounds the issue of food. In Portugal, food accounts for a very high percentage of the ecological footprint. As is often the case, it is a challenging area to make significant reductions in and actions are required in terms of both diet choices and product sourcing.
How visitors travel to the site lies outside the developer’s direct control and therefore they are unable to make firm commitments about footprint reductions, nonetheless this has been modelled due to its likely significant impact and to identify strategies to reduce it. This analysis shows that:
- The transport impact of visitors will range widely depending on where they travel from and their mode of transport;
- A holiday at Mata de Sesimbra can be part of an overall sustainable lifestyle for people living in Europe (assuming that they are living a One Planet Lifestyle at home). How frequently a ‘one planet’ budget allows an individual to visit varies from annual multi-trips to once every six years depending on how they travel and from where. For example:
- a tourist travelling by train from Madrid could visit up to four times a year;
- a UK holiday maker travelling by train can enjoy a one-week stay twice a year;
- for Swedish tourists travelling by plane, their ‘budget’ could allow them to visit once every six years.
It should be noted that this figures are indicative and will depend entirely on the lifestyle of the tourist, both at home and when on holiday, but they are useful for giving an idea of target markets and potential promotions that could be used to encourage sustainable transport.
What this means for the development of Mata de Sesimbra
These findings will have an impact on two main issues:
- the design of Mata de Sesimbra; and
- the strategic market positioning of the development.
In terms of design, the analysis has raised issues around how to create a sense of community in a development with a large transitory population, and how to educate people (specifically tourists) about food and their diet.
The architects, Fosters + Partners, have responded to this by clustering residences, developing a strategy to integrate food growing into the site and creating a ‘food experience’.
Concerning the market positioning of the development, the analysis has supported a strategy to increase the number of permanent residents as well as encouraging local tourists – both will help to reduce long-haul flights. It has also opened up the discussion of how partnerships could be developed with rail providers to encourage the use of more sustainable modes of transport.
Elena Bertarelli at Fosters and Partners commented:”The Ecological Footprint analysis of residents really opened our eyes to the impact of lifestyles and specifically food. To respond to this we have sought opportunities to incorporate food growing into the design with productive landscape areas that can either be managed by local farmers or residents as well as proposing an array of spaces for food experience activities for residents and visitors e.g. growing food to cooking it and eating it. Similarly the site’s transport strategy and the car parking plan is driven by the twin aims of creating high quality external communal space and encouraging non-car means of travel”.
From Green to Sustainable: Keeping it Honest
Geof Syphers, Chief Sustainability Officer at Codding Enterprises and Kevin Hydes, CEO of deep green building services engineering company, Integral Group, and former Chair of the World Green Building Council (pictured left to right) discuss the relative strengths of One Planet Living and LEED methodologies for sustainable community developments.
Ever been in this situation?
A developer sets out to build a community that will use only half the typical amount of drinking water. He has a clear set of strategies and technologies to cut water use, but is left wondering why environmental groups say he is not doing enough to protect water resources. Exasperated, he asks, “Isn’t this green enough? What more can I do?”
Or maybe this is more like it. Another developer sets out to design a zero carbon neighborhood but gets bogged down along the way. The zero carbon challenge seems to encompass everything from street trees to city bus service. With so many ways in which development seems to impact the climate, the developer has a hard time creating a plan to achieve his vision of zero carbon living. He is overwhelmed and in need of a plan.
These situations are the legacy of two rating systems. But they don’t have to be.
In the first case, the developer used the US Green Building Council’s LEED® rating system, known for encouraging high efficiency, low-impact building and neighborhood developments. The strength of LEED comes from its guideline reference manuals which provide specific recommendations on everything from the amount of fresh air needed in buildings to encouraging development near existing grocery stores, schools and jobs.
The developer working with LEED has an easy time setting a clear performance goal to use less than 50% of the drinking water allowed under a national standard, but has no idea of whether his water efficient project will help or hurt local water resources. By only looking at the project’s performance relative to a standard, he cannot draw any conclusions about the impact on local infrastructure, streams, wetlands and habitat. He has no idea about the actual impact of his project.
In the second case, the developer is using BioRegional’s One Planet Communities® program, a system known for encouraging development where everyone can easily live with a one-planet ecological footprint. The strength of One Planet Communities comes from its reference to absolute impacts like species diversity, aquifer depth and self-reported happiness. These ultimate goals are clearly more important than proximate goals like water efficiency because they actually test for sustainability. A project’s water use that further stresses a limited supply—no matter how efficient—is not sustainable. But because ultimate goals can seem so distant from our day-to-day decisions, the developer looking for a clear plan to reach zero carbon has no idea where to begin.
As LEED and One Planet Communities continue to refine their programs, we are starting to experiment with how the two can work together. At Sonoma Mountain Village in California, both programs are in use, where they perform very different functions. The LEED provides a great collection of best practices and helps the team develop detailed tasks to move toward sustainability, while One Planet Communities provides verification that the sum total of actions suggested by LEED achieves “true sustainability,” meaning that if everyone on Earth lived in identical communities we would need just one planet to provide all of our resources.
The One Planet Communities program also verifies that every action suggested by LEED truly contributes to achieving sustainability. In one example, LEED-ND suggested leaving soil with steep slopes undisturbed, but the process used in One Planet Communities revealed that the berms on site were stockpiled topsoil which needed to be spread to restore soil health, improve community connectivity and support better stormwater controls. But such stories are nuanced and can be difficult to communicate.
The success of any rating system lies in its ability to tell a complex story in a simple way. LEED gained its popularity and effectiveness by doing that for building performance, and used the Olympic standard (silver/gold/platinum) to generate some healthy competition as well. BREAAM offered a similar “ladder to success” with Bespoke, as has Green Star, CASBEE and other programs around the world.
One Planet Communities uses these other rating systems as a baseline standard for issues like efficiency and material selection, and then reaches out to the social, land use and lifestyle issues beyond. This is long overdue, for what good is an energy efficient building if it is full of unhappy people who will not maintain it?
Others are moving in this direction, too. Green-minded groups around the world are shifting focus from single buildings to communities to Ecodistricts, searching for ways to get the most out of our efficient technologies by really looking at what drives social behavior, and it is precisely at this intersection where we need both LEED and One Planet Communities.
One system provides the detailed guidance and performance standards, the commissioning feedback and a competitive spirit. The other keeps us honest, verifies that we are not simply “buying green,” and gets us to consider how the design of a town square can shape our behavior in ways that impacts our health and our environment.
As Sonoma Mountain Village and other projects experiment with using LEED and One Planet Communities together, we will keep you posted on what we learn. So far, it seems like an excellent pairing.
Annual Review of Sonoma Mountain Village published
As part of the ongoing endorsement of Sonoma Mountain Village (SOMO) in California, USA, BioRegional has recently reviewed the progress against the project’s One Planet Action Plan. SOMO’s developer, Codding Enterprises, have been operating within a particularly difficult economic climate resulting in the delay of construction of the new build residential phase. However, a significant amount of progress has been made, focusing on the existing buildings and the business space.
Some of the key achievements include good progress against the pathway to zero carbon, with a 1.14 MWe PV array and the start of construction of an additional 1 MWe array. All occupied existing buildings have undergone significant retrofits for water and energy efficiency and one tenant, Comcast, achieved the Platinum LEED rating. The Comcast retrofit managed to achieve a 98% diversion of waste away from landfill which is the highest in LEED history. Furthermore, Codding have been working very hard lobbying for a regional passenger train service in Sonoma county, which will have a station located in a 10 minute walk from the town square, as part of the sustainable transport strategy for the site.
Much has been done to set up community facilities including developing an Event Centre which held 200 events last year and gives priority to environmental groups. There are now over 700 jobs on site in the commercial premises and a successful green business incubator has been set up.
Codding worked with BioRegional to assess the embodied carbon impacts of their light weight steel frame system. It was found that for the building specification being considered this system had a significantly lower carbon impact than a standard concrete frame (though savings were smaller if compared to low carbon concrete).
There are early indications that SOMO has become a catalyst in their region and inspired other developers to create plans for zero carbon zero waste communities. Codding are showing that it is possible for a developer to reach outside the typical scope of a company and really influence the wider community to become more sustainable. Congratulations to Codding Enterprises on the many successes achieved in the first North American One Planet Community!
You can read the full Annual Review report by clicking on the link below:
And you can find the original One Planet Action Plan here:
One Planet partners to get support from world experts
BioRegional is launching an Expert Panel for the One Planet initiative, which will draw on the knowledge and experience of leading names in international sustainability to help keep the One Planet initiative and its endorsed partners and projects at the cutting edge of green thinking and technology.
With an initial focus on the One Planet Communities programme, panel members have been selected for their expertise in areas including urban planning, green building, ecological footprinting, policy, and campaigning.
Its six independent members are: Susan Burns, CEO of ecological footprinting think tank, Global Footprint Network; Jim Heid, President and co-founder of US based sustainable development advisory company, UrbanGreen; Kevin Hydes, CEO of deep green building services engineering company, Integral Group and former Chair of the World Green Building Council; Tony Juniper, UK based author and environmental campaigner; Professor Li Shirong, Professor of construction management at Chongqing University and Deputy Director General of Chongqing Foreign Trade and Economic Relations Commission, China; and Raf Tuts, Chief of the Urban Environment and Planning Branch, UN-HABITAT.
They are joined by representatives from BioRegional’s endorsed One Planet Communities partner organisations, with their experience of practical delivery of the One Planet Communities programme: Pete Halsall, BioRegional Quintain Ltd; Geof Syphers, Codding Enterprises and Paulo Reis Silva, Pelicano.

The role of the Expert Panel is to ensure that the ‘planet with a heart’ logo remains, and is increasingly recognised as, a symbol of truly exemplary commitment to, and leadership in, sustainability.
The One Planet Communities programme is using the concepts of One Planet Living and sustainable ecological footprint to create a network of the earth’s greenest neighbourhoods. These neighbourhoods will be showcased at the Rio+20 World Summit in 2012 to demonstrate to policy makers, business leaders and civil society that it can be easy, attractive and affordable for people to live happy and healthy lives within a fair share of the earth’s resources. BioRegional are excited and pleased to have the support of the Expert Panel in making this happen.
The Panel will be run using a virtual network, with three group sessions each year – the first is scheduled for 17th March.
To read more visit the role of the panel and member profile pages of this site.
BioRegional at Ecobuild, 1st – 3rd March 2011, London
If you are involved in building, regeneration, design, energy or sustainability you will probably have the UK’s biggest green building expo already ringed in your diary.
We’re running seminars and workshops on all three days to share our 15 years of sustainability experience with you. We’ll be bringing all the Ecobuild ideas together to help create a holistic sustainability framework for your project or business. And our experts will be looking at some hot topics: Big Society, Biomass Energy, Green Deal, BedZED, Green Entrepreneurship and Green Behaviour Change.
We look forward to seeing you there!
To find out more click here.
Setting up a sustainable food enterprise at One Brighton
Hello, I’m Amy Anslow and I live in Brighton Belle at One Brighton.
I had been living in Brighton for a few months when my sister Ruth decided to relocate here. We wanted to continue working up an idea for a joint business venture – a social enterprise dedicated to healthy, sustainable and affordable food.
We both love Brighton, and knew it was the perfect place for us to live, and to launch a new ethical business driven by social objectives.
In August we committed to living together for a year to work full time on getting our business on its feet, and so set about looking for somewhere to live that would satisfy our many requirements!
We were immediately drawn to One Brighton – as well as great looking, smartly finished homes, every aspect of the design had been carefully considered with sustainability and energy saving in mind, resulting in some uniquely clever features.
Living here has not disappointed, it’s just over four months later and we still marvel at stuff, like the amazing air system (we don’t really understand how it magically creates a consistently comfortable climate regardless of the weather outside, we’re just glad it does!).
We are trying to live in a way that’s consistent with our values and the ethics of the social enterprise we’re building. Living at One Brighton helps us do that. Not just because living in a home that behaves in an eco-friendly way all by itself makes us greener, but also because the 10 One Planet Principles remind and prompt us to consider our choices.
Our hope is that residents in both buildings will get together and share ideas to create a real community at One Brighton, which could further enhance the experience of living here for all of us.
Durban, South Africa to host COP 17
BioRegional South Africa is gearing up to make the most of the opportunity afforded by the recent announcament that Durban is to be the host city for the Seventeenth Conference of the Parties (COP 17) of the UNFCCC and CMP17 in December 2011. In particular, the intention is to showcase a One Planet Demonstration Home in collaboration with land developer Tongaat Hulett Developments and a local housing developer. The house will be part of a new residential area developing in north Durban in an area known as Izinga, on Umhlanga Ridge, and will be an example of One Planet Living in the middle to upper socio-economic housing range.
Local Durban architects East Coast Architects have completed concept drawings for the home, an outline business plan is taking shape and eThekwini municipality is supportive of fast tracking planning permission
such that the house is on the ground in time for COP 17 as a best practice exemplar and ‘One Planet’ exhibition centre for overseas visitors, local, provincial and national government and other housing developers.
The home will set a precedent for other homes to be built at Izinga as well as 100 affordable homes at a new town centre urban development nearby known as Bridge City, a joint venture between eThekwini municipality and Tongaat Hulett, which BioRegional is engaging with another developer on to create 100 ‘affordable’ One Planet homes at this site.








