Friday, October 30, 2009

Diversity versus Ecodevelopments

I have followed major Seattle developments from the ones in South Lake Union to ones over in Columbia City. I have been struck with this reoccuring question as to what is an ecoproject versus a project that is good for the community around it. I moved to Seattle about 7 years ago for the eco-movement here and have stayed. One thing that first struck me was the homogenous nature to the place where I was at. Go to Ballard, go to Fremont, Capitol Hill, all places where a 20-something would go but mainly one that is white. I wondered, why is it that these are the places where I am "suppose to" go to?

I recalled that I was drawn to live in the Southeast (Beacon Hill, Ranier Valley, etc.) because of the diversity of people that I would come in contact with. I was a white person in a sea of diversity, a place where I grew up and one that I seek. In a city with just over 70% white population (see census), it is interesting how the majority are moving to "up and coming neighborhoods" because a project is "Eco" or well more affordable. So is it better to move to those neighborhoods because it is more affordable and you can afford a new eco home, but that potentially causes others to move because their neighborhood is changing, pushing them out.

At Bainbridge Graduate Institute, some students and I are delving into the issue of creating Diversity in Communities. Can a community be built that fosters, grows and maintains diversity? I hope that this question can come to every development as it chooses a market that is different than the types of people that currently reside in the area. I hope to share the results of our Creative Sessions about this issue in future updates. Click on the tag "diversity" to see all the blogs about it.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Ecobroker....

I am still wondering of the real value and power that the EcoBroker brand brings to the Real Estate Industry. I have heard conflicting information here in the Puget Sound as we have a strong Green Industry outside of a certification system.

(Article feed from google reader to this blog)
Ecofriendly Real Estate Practices Minus The Greenwash: "Part of being “green” means making some thoughtful decisions. As an EcoBroker, I find that clients often say they want to be green because they have a romanticized view of what this entails, aptly named greenwashing.
The reality is that they are usually not sure what it really means. In many cases, they find that going [...]"

Sunday, October 11, 2009

Timing

Now is a critical time in deciphering the articles about this and that building going LEED, Built Green, 'Green', 'Environmentally-Friendly', or 'Eco'. This is a dedicated blog to the work that the Real Estate industry is doing to quantify Green Real Estate.