Los Angeles Eco-Village

Ecovillages

la ecovillage site

The Los Angeles Eco-Village (LAEV) was founded in 1993 in the two-block neighborhood of Bimini and White House Place in the intensely urban Wilshire Center/Koreatown area of Los Angeles. Started as a project of the nonprofit Cooperative Resources & Services Project (CRSP)after the 1992 civil uprisings, our purpose is to demonstrate the processes of becoming a healthy and sustainable neighborhood socially, ecologically and economically. The start-up of LAEV was the culmination of a 10-year planning process for a new-construction ecovillage seven miles away from the current location. The uprisings were a wake-up call for LAEV planners: we decided to heal our already existing built-out older neighborhood! We felt this was essential if there was to be any significant quality of life in the future of urban dwellers. We were also on a mission to influence city dwellers everywhere to establish more cooperative and ecologically sensitive living patterns.
We are still working toward a common vision among the very diverse intentional and preexisting neighbors who live here. Overall, the founding vision included demonstrating lower-impact and higher-quality living patterns among newly arriving Eco-Villagers and pre-existing neighbors drawn to that vision.
Those interested in becoming members are requested to demonstrate their commitment to more ecological and cooperative living patterns. We try to balance our diversity in the following areas: income, ethnicity, generations, gender, and household composition.
There are about a dozen proactive Eco-Villagers within the current 35 person intentional community. There are approximately 500 residents in the two-block neighborhood. The vision for some of us is that someday all or most who live in the two blocks will manifest Eco-Village values. Some neighbors who are not participating, nonetheless, appreciate the work that has been done to make the neighborhood a safer, more friendly place.
Over the past decade, CRSP has purchased two apartment buildings (48 units of housing, including two common units) which we are slowly eco-retrofitting. The intentional community is now organizing to create a community land trust and a limited equity housing co-op designed to keep the buildings (and other properties close by)permanently affordable for low to middle income households.

North America

United States

California

Los Angeles

Bimini Place

Green Century Institute: Green Community Network

This relatively simple Green Community Network Map is a concept demonstration for a next generation mapping interface that is being developed under the auspices of the Green Century Institute. GCI has already initiated a full software development spec of this leading edge green 'metamap' and will soon be putting it out for development to the green open source community.

The current map gives a geographical access point for navigating across the internet to the websites for various green communties around the world—with an emphasis on communities in the Green Century Institute's local bioregion, the San Francisco Bay Area and Northern California. If you have information on a green community you would like to see added to the Green Community Network Map or any other ecological development projects that fits neatly within the map's current categories, please contact GCI through this site, providing project/community description and links in the body of the email.