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Sustainability and the Legacy of Our Built Environments

Sustainability and the Legacy of Our Built Environments . Start With The Concept of SUSTAINABILITY. Very Simply – “able to be maintained” Or “the ability to meet our needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet theirs”

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Sustainability and the Legacy of Our Built Environments

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  1. Sustainability and the Legacy of Our Built Environments

  2. Start With The Concept ofSUSTAINABILITY • Very Simply – “able to be maintained” • Or “the ability to meet our needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet theirs” • Or “the potential longevity of vital human ecological support systems” • Or “ “

  3. And Then Ask Some Basic Questions • Am I sustainable? • Do I live sustainably? • Do you live sustainably? • Is my way of life sustainable? • Do we all live sustainably? • What are the costs? Consequences? • Short Term or Long Term?

  4. Then The Most Important Issue • Is it mandatory that we live differently? Does our future depend on a sustainability model?

  5. So What Are We (You) Doing?

  6. Lets start with our Current Relationship to the Earth? • Land consumption (development) since 1984 is more than development the previous 300 years. • Between 1970 and 2000 the percentage of the USA population living in suburbs has grown from 38% to 50%. • 37.4 % increase in suburban poverty from 2000-2010 • Between 1986 and 1997, an estimated 58,500 acres of wetlands were lost each year in the United States. • Worldwide - that is about 60 acres per hour since 1780!

  7. Recreating Landscapes to Suit our Needs – Not the Environment

  8. Degrading Water Supplies In The Process

  9. Fundamentally Changing Our Water Cycle

  10. To Fundamentally Change Our Environment

  11. Alter Stream Channels

  12. What do we do? • Because we manipulate the Natural Environment to Build the Human Environment

  13. With Only Our Idea Of Land Improvement

  14. What Happens? With General Disregard for Natural Resources

  15. CreationgEcosystem Wide Problems Extreme Siltation and Pollution of a Resource

  16. Into What Only We Consider Harmony With Nature?

  17. So……How Did We Get Into This Model Of Land Use Anyway? • We Value Private Ownership of Land • Use of Land is a Local Issue • A Local Government is Sustained By Tax Revenue • Majority of Tax Revenue is Generated through Property • Developed Property Increases Revenue

  18. Downtown as the center of Commerce and Residential Density Rural Areas as dispersed farms, mills and homes. Dispersed Environmental Impacts because much of the ecosystem unaltered But construction around water resources as a highway of commerce Early Model

  19. Downtown

  20. Blackwater Creek

  21. Blackwater Creek

  22. Mills

  23. Existent but consider the pattern of human use. Deforestation and Erosion Farms and remaining wilderness. But Consider the lack of Impervious Surfaces. Environmental Impacts

  24. Initial Model Downtown as the center of Commerce and Residential Density Rural Areas as dispersed farms, mills and homes Fundamental change from Rail to the Automobile Individual Mobility!!! Downtown as Crowded and Less Desirable Living *Fundamental Shift - Rural Areas as Shopping Centers and Neighborhoods Transitional Model

  25. Pittman Plaza Lynchburg • Subdivisions • Malls • Interstates • Parking Lots • Development follows the rooftops

  26. Average Home Size • 1970 – 1500 sq ft • 1990 – 1700 sq ft • 2003 – 2300 sq ft • Family size over past 30 years decreases by 25% • House size increases by 50%

  27. Environmental Impacts • Increased Use of Land Per Capita • Paved Surfaces • Generation of Traffic • Loss of Farmland • Erosion, Sedimentation • Filling of Wetlands

  28. Initial Model Downtown as the center of Commerce and Residential Density – Highly Desirable Rural Areas as dispersed farms, mills and homes Transitional Model Fundamental change from Rail to the Automobile Individual Mobility!!! Downtown as Crowded Rural Areas as Shopping Centers and Neighborhoods Current Model • Fully dependent on the Automobile • Individual Autonomy • Downtowns Abandoned • Rural Areas aggressively consumed for Shopping Centers and Neighborhoods • Chain Development in firm control of our Lives • Economy driven by consumption – Must be NEW! • Past infrastructure abandoned • Environmental protection only when convenient

  29. To Have Something Like This

  30. Sustainable Communities?

  31. Ultimately - Our Current Reality

  32. Modern Stream Alterations

  33. Home Depot

  34. Idea of Wetlands

  35. Integration Into Environment

  36. Abandonment of Properties

  37. Plaza

  38. Downtown

  39. What Did We Expect? • All of our Stream are Impaired. • We really don’t have time/resources to help you with this problem until 2022. • In 2022 we will start the TMDL 5-10 year process only putting resources toward identification • When we finish you will need to implement solutions

  40. What would we Expect? Chesapeake Bay TMDL is expected to cost 15 billion dollars. Needed to stem current pollution loads and loss of fishery.

  41. So What are the Considerations? Do You Value: • Our Water Environment • Wetlands • Development • Water Quality • Economy • Consumption

  42. New Considerations? • When did you decide to be part of this model? • Are you independent from or dependent on a corporate created existence? • Every day we decide to support this model or reject it – we vote with every penny we spend. • Remember - the Environment is intertwined into every choice you make so - make a difference.

  43. Create Positive Changes

  44. And Don’t Ever Give Up

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