Richard coined the term "ecocity" about 35 years ago and has been steadily amassing a repertoire of sketches that seek to explore and describe the concept and design approach. The book will highlight about 150 of his original ecocity related drawings, both color and black and white. In fact, I'm the proud owner of one of his original early sketches that are part of the video and will be in the book -- I snatched it up at a recent fundraiser for Ecocity Builders.

The sketches are arranged according to topic, including whole cities, plazas, transport, natural features, mapping, ecocity fractals, basic principles and strategies for communicating, among others. One thing I love about Richard is that all of his ideas for designing car-free cities aren't Utopian fantasies but always backed up by concrete plans on how to make existing city infrastructures more pedestrian-friendly. From daylighting a creek and creating a pedestrian plaza in downtown Berkeley to developing a comprehensive international set of standards evaluating cities’ progress towards becoming ecocities, Richard is a hands-on guy. On any given weekend you may find him in Kathmandu working on sanitation, rainwater harvesting, and urban agriculture projects, or riding his bike to Codornices Creek in Berkeley, telling the story of how he liberated the creek from its concrete tunnel over 15 years ago, restoring native plants and starting the process of opening up and reshaping the city landscape.


The fact that a guy like Richard has to have a pledge drive to raise $3500 just so he can finish a book shows that we still have a long way to go in getting our priorities straight. It's like that old bumper sticker, "It will be a great day when the military has to hold a bake sale to buy a bomber." All too often the stale old thinking that puts the car at the top of the transportation food chain and promotes suburban sprawl is still systemically rewarded, while those who've been imaginatively and diligently working on real solutions to our unsustainable fossil foolish ways are left standing on the sidelines.
However, the beauty of visionary artists is that they will carry on in their creative endeavors, because the motivation to explore life and all its possibilities comes from a deeper place not tied to the latest trends, societal rewards, or monetary interest. Safe for the most ignorant climate zombies and eternal oil supply dreamers we all know that doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results is insanity. If we're really serious about addressing the multitude of ecological problems the planet is facing, we've got to focus more attention on our cities, where 70% of the world population resides. And who better to turn to than Richard Register, who — to borrow and tweak another famous quote — has been drawing the change he wishes to see in the world for over 35 years.

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crossposted at A World of Words - Ruminations from the Spaces between Soil and Soul
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