Vancouver's Leader in Transition toward Strong, Resilient, Complete Communities
Village engages individuals, neighbourhoods & organizations to take actions that build sustainable communities & have fun doing it. Join us!
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Interested in getting involved or volunteering with Village Vancouver? check out http://www.villagevancouver.ca/page/volunteering-1.
Regular activities:
Interested in participating in a VV garden? We have collaborative gardens/garden spaces in 5 neighbourhoods. Contact us at gardening@villagevancouver.ca. Gardening now in progress. New gardeners welcome (space allowing).
Kits Village Recycling Depot (Kits Community Centre) Next depot: Thursday, June 15th
Main St. Village monthly gatherings (1st Tuesdays Little Mountain Neighbourhood House) Currently on hold due to COVID
Permaculture Vancouver Meetups (3rd Wednesdays VV McBride Park Fieldhouse (sometimes elsewhere) Next meetup: Special date Thursday, July 29th
West End Community Potluck/WE Urban Garden Club (3rd Sundays West End Community Centre, in July and August 4th Thursdays - July 22nd and August 26th.
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Catherine,
Ross tells me you are somehow connected to Cool North Shore. I have spoken at length with Warren McKay and have been active in trying to start a similar movement and set of volunteer programs in Vancouver.
I have a strong background and interest in housing energy efficiency, having worked with the early Passivhaus movement in Germany and Austria in the late 1980s when large renovations and new developments in central Europe for the first time sought carbon neutrality in operating energy requirements. North America is significantly behind, and IMHO, Vancouver is heading backwards with its fixation on glass and concrete towers.
But be that as it may, there are tens of thousands of apartment and detached dwelling units that could see their net energy use reduced in half, if there were an economic argument for doing so. Alas, I cannot consistently find one, at least not after comparing current labour and materials costs for efficiency-related renovations with the value of the expected energy savings--even counting on rapid energy cost increases. (My natural gas commodity costs have dropped in half over the past 4 years, making a mockery of once reasonable Peak-Oil-based assumptions.)
There are nevertheless ecological reasons to do what economics do not support. I am renovating a home in Douglas Park with entirely reclaimed lumber, passive and active solar additions, and high-efficiency lighting and appliances. My biggest costs, however, are city permit fees and regulatory barriers and hurdles. Even suggesting I planned to install PV panels on a garage roof elicited only a laughs and then new requirements for extensive structural engineering analyses and assurances.
Just last month we invited a rep from the Embers Home Energy project to present to a Main Street Village potluck that we hold at Little Mountain Neighbourhood House every month. We talked for over an hour about improving home energy efficiency, both in new construction and renovation. Getting people to take the next step is of course much harder. I hope you might have some ideas.
We hold a potluck at LMNH every month and our next is Tuesday, April 10th, where the focus will be on providing both free seeds and garden plot ideas and designs. We may also have free pots and soil to offer to any attendee. Most of the seeds are food, but we also have many different beneficial flowers.
We send out occasional event reminders to those who've joined the Main Street Village, which is our very own local version of Village Vancouver. We will also have many other events around cycling, gardening, seed saving, and event planning (Car Free Day) this spring.
Welcome to the Village, and hope to see you soon.
Randy, Village Vancouver and Main Street Neighbourhood Board member
Welcome to Village Vancouver, Catherine!
Cheers,
Ross