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RETHINKING: Indigenous Knowledge and Sustainable Urban Design

6/16/2013

 
The goal is to develop architectural and urban design strategies that are not energy or resource neutral but rather generative producers (of energy, ecological habitat, food and water) linked into the energy and resource flows of the surrounding environment.

What resonated most is a series of Maori design principles shared by Amanda Yates and Shaun Awatere:

  1. Kotahitanga – Cohesion and collaboration. Collective cooperative and effective partnerships and collaboration with community.
  2. Wairuatanga – Embedded emotion and spirit.  
    Everything should support our spiritual well being and consciousness. Emotional connection with the environment that links people.
  3. Manaakitanga – Hospitality and security.
    Embracing and welcoming visitors, and protection and security of community.
  4. Whanaugatanga – Participation and membership in the community and social setting
  5. Kaitiakitanga – Sustainable resource management. Protection of significant landscape features and natural enviornment.
  6. Rangatiratanga – Leadership, identity, self-determination. Community can lead and take responsibility for creating and determining their own future.
  7. Matauranga – Knowledge and understanding. Understanding of community history, identities, character.
  8. Orangatanga – Maintain health and well being
  9. Mauritanga – Essence or life-force of a natural environment. To identify and promote the maintenance or restoration of a mauri (the life force which all objects contain). e.g. rain-tank collection systems, grey-water recycling systems, passive solar design.

More Here.
Additional Resources Here.

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This site promotes the orientation, activities, resources and projects of the Centre for the Study of Sustainable Futures and Spirituality (GCSSFS). The Centre is supported in the area of content generation, project execution, design and general administration by Public Media Agency (PMA),  Petaling Jaya, Malaysia under the direct care of one of their creative consultants, Dr. M. Nadarajah (Nat). Nat works as consultant on different projects.  He supports PMA on its various projects supporting social causes. Nat is presently engaged with Xavier University@Bhubaneshwar, India, with it School of Sustainability. He works with Loyola College@Chennai, India on issues related sustainability and spirituality. He is associated with the Centre for Diaspora Studies@MSU, Tirunelveli, India. He continues to support Pesticide Action Network Asia and the Pacific (PAN AP), which is based in Penang, Malaysia, as consultant on a project to set up a 'blended' institution, International People's Agroecology Multiversity (IPAM), to promote agroecology across Asia and the Pacific. He is also a member of the Asian Public Intellectual (API)  community.

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