From Caravan Park to Ecovillage
Michael
White interviews John Talbott - director of the Ecovillage.
Since not all of our readers will
be familiar with the Field of Dreams as part of the Ecovillage
Project, would you give us some of its history, and the
vision for it.
I’ll start by giving a context for the Ecovillage
Project itself. It’s simply trying to redevelop
our site, the caravan park and immediately adjacent land,
into a model for sustainable living. On a physical level
it means replacing caravans with houses; building new
houses; providing energy from renewable resources like
wind and solar energy; treating all of our own waste water,
which we’re doing with the Living Machine; and growing
as much food as we can. All this is about providing for
our physical needs in a sustainable way, working with
what nature gives us to meet our needs.
The Ecovillage concept also includes aspects of sustainability
which are about community, creating home, creating social
cohesion, a sense of belonging. Creating an economic base
within the community which can help support people. And
finally, some might say the most important aspect, there
is also an element of what I call ?spiritual sustainability?.
That’s about nurturing our sense of the larger purpose,
something bigger than ourselves, and helping that to inform
what we’re doing in the more mundane or ordinary
aspects of our lives.
So the Field of Dreams is like the next step in our Ecovillage
development. We’ve built about twenty five buildings
over the last ten years in The Park, on land owned by
the Foundation. It’s been a very slow process because
the site itself is pretty well already occupied with something.
Every square inch seems to have several different future
visions for it depending on who you are talking to! In
a practical way most sites have caravans on them, which
have people living in them, and so the replacing of the
caravans is slower than we first thought it would be because
of all the complications of moving things and people.
About half of the caravans are owned privately, for which
people have paid considerable sums, and we can’t
just say, ?Ok, we’re going to develop this area
so can you please move your caravan off.?
The other side of replacing caravans is that all the pipes,
electric cables, telephone lines, sewage and so on, are
all not right for houses. They’re fine for caravans,
but as we redevelop we also have to replace all of the
infrastructure. That’s expensive!
The Field really came along about nine years ago when
the Bichan family, who own the adjacent farm, applied
for planning permission for this triangle of land adjacent
to the Foundation. Initially it wasn’t our vision
to see the farmland turned into housing. But they were
successful in their application and with the planning
consent the value of the land went up dramatically, and
then buying it for farmland wasn’t economically
feasible. Later on we found that the agricultural viability
of that particular part of the farm was not as good as
we had imagined anyway. It’s very dry, the top soil
was quite thin and it is mostly shingle underneath.
We also realised that once planning permission for housing
had been granted somebody was going to build on it, and
we hoped it would be us. But we couldn’t afford
the price being asked and were forced to sit and watch
as the parade of developers came to look at the site.
But no one bid, and finally in1995 we found a win-win
price with the owners and concluded a sale.
During the waiting time we had meditated about this land
and it felt like this was a piece of the puzzle in our
own long-term development of The Park that was falling
into place, though at the time we didn’t know how
it would ever happen. Building on the Field would take
the pressure off the Foundation’s land and allow
people to have houses without dislocating caravans and
people in the process, and without having to up-grade
all the existing infrastructure. So it feels like this
is a momentous opportunity in terms of creating a critical
mass of good quality ecological houses, and in taking
on this forty-plus houses development, we’re going
to make the jump to being more of an Ecovillage and less
of a caravan park.
It’s my understanding that
there is no master plan for development, though there
is a planning group.
Yes. A long time ago we thought about doing a big master
plan, which is how a normal developer would do it. They
would control the design for every site. But I think we
realised very early on that it wasn’t going to work
like that here. What we needed was a structure plan, something
that someone coming along in five or ten years time would
still be able to make sense of, but without dictating
too much detail. I think the only thing we’re trying
to achieve, quite informally, and as individual projects
come along, is finding a balance of individual creativity
and collective harmony. Trying to choose materials and
forms that harmonise with and complement each other.
The barrels form one harmonious little cluster, though
individually they are very different in design and layout.
And Bag End has another particular style that has harmony
within it, and it doesn’t clash with the barrels
either. So we try to tie things in without being too controlling.
We want people to be creative and have the freedom to
build their dream.
Ecovillage Ltd is a company that was formed five years
ago specifically to do this project. We had imagined doing
it with the Foundation as it was doing all the other building
projects at the time. But due to lots of circumstances
we realised it wouldn’t work. So with the Foundation’s
blessing, and their offer of access and moral support,
Ecovillage Ltd raised the funds to buy the land and to
develop it from within the community. Much of the finance
came from the people that will eventually be building
on the individual sites.
The company has four directors; Simon Richards, Carmella
Sutherland, David Dittman and myself. There are about
twenty shareholders, and we expect to broaden this to
include others who eventually build. We’re seeing
it very much as a community business. I should also mention
Patrick Nash who helped us in the past, and Tom Clarke
who was a director and is now involved in designing the
infrastructure for the Field.
In light of the work at the Foundation
with nature spirits, has that relationship been consciously
continued in this process?
Yes, I think in our design process we try to tune into
the nature kingdoms; again finding a balance between our
human needs for housing but not forgetting nature’s
needs. Experiencing that real sense of co-creation with
nature is really important to me personally and I think
to all of us here. If that can’t be honoured here,
at Findhorn, then we have a problem! For me co-creation
and cooperation with nature is still a key element in
everything we do.
One manifestation of that is when a design is brought
to the Park Planning Group for consideration. We discuss
the plan and look at its siting, layout and technical
merits, the architectural style and so on. But we also
always go out to the actual site and meditate. We find
the exact place it will be and see how it feels, try to
get a sense of what the natural energies would like, and
then share our impressions, and include these in our decision-making.
We’ve had one or two fun experiences recently. Like
having the horses that were grazing in the field coming
up to us during the meditation and nudging into the circle.
Once one even tried to eat the house plans! So the nature
kingdom had joined us literally in physical form on that
occasion. How you might interpret these little interventions
is another matter! Often we have a range of impressions
within the group, and we try to balance them and find
the ?right? way forward if there are apparent conflicts.
The intention is to always bring this other element of
attunement into our decisions, as well as looking at the
practical.
You’ve just come back from two months away, and
before you left, the Field was still a meadow, with horses
grazing in it. Now it’s bare earth and huge piles
of dirt, with diggers and bulldozers all over. How did
you feel when you saw it ?
Well, I’m an engineer so it certainly wasn’t
a surprise. I knew what to expect. But I think it’s
also true to say that it’s such a relief to have
a site like this to develop, after all the struggles we’ve
had working with land that’s already occupied, and
already planted and landscaped — to have a bit of
a blank slate to work with. It was really just grass and
weeds.
It feels exciting. I mean, nature spirits are builders.
I always use the metaphor that the devas are like architects:
angelic forces that have to create a pattern. And that’s
what we’ve been working with up to this point, a
sense of angelic connection in planning for The Park,
and now suddenly we’re into a nature spirit energy
that says, ?Go, go, go! Build, build, build!? It feels
to me this is the kind of energy there now. It’s
chaos, too; total chaos! But all our building projects
have been like this. This is just on a larger scale. You
have to clear the earth, and move things around, decide
where to dig holes. And then you bring the earth back,
plant it, soften it. And then nature takes over again!
So finally, what about the future?
I think may be it's important to talk about why we are
doing this. There is such a demand in the wider Foundation
Commumnity to come and live here in the Park, and be part
of the core community. Make it part of their everyday
experience. I think, metaphorically but also physically,
we 're helping the community here to get grounded. They're
not just living in temporary caravans, which most of us
can tolorate for a little while , maybe even longer. But
ultimately they're temporary. I think, as a community,
we're becoming more grounded, and people that are coming
to stay for a while, putting down roots, building their
lives here. Up to now places to build have been very limited.
This project is giving a lot more people the opportunity
to do that. The field of Dreams is actually building community.
Michael White