Back in the 1960s, two Tasmanians – Bill Mollison and David Holmgren – coined the term “permaculture” to describe a new way of thinking about farming, and how we can grow our food in a more ecological
Back in the 1960s, two Tasmanians – Bill Mollison and David Holmgren – coined the term “permaculture” to describe a new way of thinking about farming, and how we can grow our food in a more ecological
Back in the 1960s, two Tasmanians – Bill Mollison and David Holmgren – coined the term “permaculture” to describe a new way of thinking about farming, and how we can grow our food in a more ecologically sustainable way.
Here's how we could apply the same underlying principles to build greener, less car-dependant, more walkable cities with better public transport: https://thefifthestate.com.au/innovation/design/on-why-a-sustainable-built-environment-means-retrofitting-some-permaculture-principles-to-our-cities/
UrbanPlanning #UrbanDesign #Urbanism #Cycling #Cities #Bikes #PublicTransport @fuckcars
@ajsadauskas@aus.social @fuckcars@lemmy.ml
Permaculture.
I have been involved with it since 1991.
Mollison said that the only limitation to a Permaculture design is any limitation to the imagination of the designer.
Let's build a Permaculture community in Calkey and a group when that becomes available. I have a lot I can contribute to all that. I would add Scott Pittman (RIP) to Mollison and Holmgren.
Scott and Bill taught Permaculture design courses in many countries.