Showing posts with label Permaculture Design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Permaculture Design. Show all posts
Tuesday, 22 October 2013
Permanent Play
Permanent Play’s set of 50 Element Cards isa small solution, multi-function resource for design & education. Use them for brainstorming, energy-efficient planning, client work, designing from pattern to detail & more – the only limit is your imagination!
100% recycled post consumer waste. Reusable, Recyclable & Biodegradable. Cards manufactured at a factory using electricity 100% generated by wind power. Designed in Essex, made in Albion.
Labels:
Cards,
Education,
Permaculture Design,
Permanent Play,
Tools
Tuesday, 24 April 2012
Pareto Principle
Last weekend I attended a Permaculture Diploma support event put on by Claire White and Hedvig Murray at the Grow Mayow Community Garden in Sydenham. I was reluctant to go, the weight of an unfinished diploma and the sense of how much further on people who started much later than me were, bumming me out. But I did go, and realised how much further along I was, really most of what I need to do is to turn my notes/photos/plans into a communicable document.
A lot of people at the event kept referring to the 80/20 idea, which I believe is accurately described as the Pareto Principle. It's an appealing idea, which can be used as a quantifier for the permaculture concept of design intensivity.
I have my concerns over the wide application of 80/20 thinking though, which aren't limited to the perils of presenting is to procrastinators (who will find whole new reasons for delaying action (implementation)). I've been on the wrong end of some bad business methods based on interpreting 80/20 to suit pre-conceived ideological ends, and using the concept's apparent neutrality as a disguise for power plays.
It's a reminder that no tool is neutral, and the application of thinking tools can quickly reflect prior thinking biases - a caveat that should guide their use.
Labels:
80/20,
Design,
Diagram,
Implementation,
Infographic,
Pareto Principle,
Permaculture,
Permaculture Design,
Principles,
Tools
Monday, 14 November 2011
Al-Karama Scout Camp Accomodation
A design for villa accommodation on the Jordan Scouts campsite near the village of Karama in the Dead Sea valley of Jordan.
My design process used the OBREDIM design framework: Observation, Boundaries, Resources, Evaluation, Design, Implementation and Maintenance, however the design was not implemented so only follows the framework through OBRED.
Labels:
House,
Jordan. Drylands,
OBREDIM,
Permaculture Design,
Zone 0
Zone 0 Design
Labels:
Cool Humid,
Cool Temperate,
Domestic,
Essex,
Home,
House,
Permaculture Design,
Temperate,
Zone 0
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