Urban ecovillage on two acres

Steven Welzer
2 min readNov 18, 2022

--

https://www.filmsforaction.org/watch/rundown-apartments-reborn-as-foodforest-coliving-agritopia/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W_jLd5g4Bcs

Kailash Ecovillage is an intentional community on a 2-acre site near downtown Portland, OR that is experimenting with state of the art green living practices such as ecological sanitation. We are striving for a one planet ecological footprint, meaning if everyone lived as we do, we could produce all we need with one thriving planet with large areas of wilderness, in perpetuity.

In 2007, Ole and Maitri Ersson bought the rundown Cabana apartment complex in Portland and immediately began to de-pave parking spaces to make space for what today is a huge permaculture coliving space and urban food forest. The Kailash Ecovillage now has 55 residents who all help farm where there was once pavement, grass, a swimming pool, and an overgrown weed patch.

The community is well-prepared for systems collapse; they have extensive rainwater collection and storage, plenty of produce and they process their own sewage. Their permitted sanitation project complies with international building codes for compost toilet and urine diversion systems.

Here, nearly everything is shared. There are two community electric cars — donated by the Erssons who no longer have a private car, shared bicycles (and bike trailers), an extensive fruit orchard, berry and grape patches, and a considerable community garden space. Photovoltaics provide about two-thirds of the energy consumed by the complex.

Neil Robinson is the community’s full-time farmer who has sold thousands of dollars of Kailash produce at farmers’ markets. He moved in as a way to prepare for systemic collapse. “I wanted to learn to grow food and then have a system that could step in. We have water, we have food.” Ole explains, “We’re in this zone where it’s not a question of if, but when, we’re going to get a Richter 9 earthquake… that’s going to break all kinds of grids, the power grid is likely going to go down, the sewer grid almost undoubtedly and it’s probably going to take months, if not years, to get the sewer system going again.”

Their sanitation project can absorb 60 adults for months. Rents here are lower than the Portland average because the Erssons want Kailash to be accessible to all income levels. There’s a 300-person waitlist, but Ole hopes others will follow their example in order to accommodate the interest.

“If you look at it from an economic perspective, no business would want a complex landscape like this because it’s way too much maintenance, but what you have to do is turn the maintenance over to the residents: they get joy; it’s an antidepressant; it’s a way of creating food; it’s a way of creating community.”

https://www.kailashecovillage.org/

--

--

Steven Welzer
Steven Welzer

Written by Steven Welzer

A Green Party activist, Steve was an original co-editor of DSA’s “Ecosocialist Review.” He now serves on the Editorial Board of the New Green Horizons webzine.

No responses yet