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* '''What do you think RCA should be looking for when selecting the 12 place-based/regenerative development projects in this first cohort of applicants?''' Ones that will actually succeed - track record and focused on those who have shown they are in motion not just in idea stage + doing real world regeneration of actual land and soil
* '''What do you think RCA should be looking for when selecting the 12 place-based/regenerative development projects in this first cohort of applicants?''' Ones that will actually succeed - track record and focused on those who have shown they are in motion not just in idea stage + doing real world regeneration of actual land and soil
* '''How do you personally want to support the 12+ projects in the alliance's first cohort and at what capacity and commitment level?''' I am happy to an entire online course on this transition with the funding I would get so their are many cohorts that can go through this all - I have done online school launches with my online school Superhero Academy as well and really excited to get our community and experts involved in showing that process and building a course behind it.
* '''How do you personally want to support the 12+ projects in the alliance's first cohort and at what capacity and commitment level?''' I am happy to an entire online course on this transition with the funding I would get so their are many cohorts that can go through this all - I have done online school launches with my online school Superhero Academy as well and really excited to get our community and experts involved in showing that process and building a course behind it.
=Europe=
== Salt Cross Garden Village ==
https://odysee.com/@cohohub:4/RegenCivicsIncubator:c?r=3nA3fkHzSLF1N5zjga82M8LruBY2j6qx
* '''Representative''' Charlie Fisher, [https://collaborativehousing.org.uk/ Collaborative Housing]
* '''Location''' Oxfordshire, England
* '''How is the place-based/regenerative development project(s) you're representing regenerative?:'''  Salt Cross Garden Village (Oxfordshire), as one of the more advanced of the UK Government's 37 'Garden Communities Programme' sites, should be a beacon of citizen-participation, community-wealth generation and ecological approaches in order to accord with the Garden City Principles (TCPA) that the programme enshrines. Within the 2,200 home masterplan which includes housing, office and retail, the Developer's key slogan is "a place that celebrates natural and social ecosystems, allowing wildlife, plants and people to co-exist, thrive and benefit from each other". There is an intention for the community ownership of assets across the site, including the 1,100 affordable homes, allowing the resources for adaptation and change over decades. Commitments for net biodiversity have been made with design-focus on embedding nature and wildlife and a passive/'fabric-first' home design approach with no gas infrastructure on site. 105 homes across three clustered neighbourhoods will be reserved for self-builders as per District planning policy. Contemporary housing development utilises a ‘Build it and Bugger Off’ approach, in which the communities are left without the resources to look after diverse ecological assets, upgrade infrastructure such as broadband, energy generation technologies or adapt their streets and homes as change comes. This approach will leave neighbourhoods severely under-prepared for the effects of impending climate disaster across the planet, as recognised by surrounding local councils. Our proposal is for the development of place-based wealth generation within a Community Land Trust to support sustained and nimble investment in Salt Cross and the village of Eynsham over decades.
* '''What values, goals, and focus areas are guiding your place-based regenerative project?''' Commons ownership for future resiliance, large-scale distributed governance, financing clustered cohousing groups and self-builders, building a finance model to be more ambitious around ecology and regenerative practices
* '''Is the property/land associated with this project currently owned privately, publicly or cooperatively?''' Private ownership
* '''What is the long-term ownership intention of this property/land: private, public, cooperative, fractional?''' Community Land Trust
* '''What is your legal structure? What type of or combination of legal entities will your project use to protect the land and the members?''' Charity, Sugested to be a Community Benefit Society at this stage.
* '''How many acres/hectares is this project?''' 154
* '''How many acres/hectares is native/untouched/wilderness?''' 5  - the existing fields are currently used almost entirely for monocropping agriculture and horsiculture
* '''How many acres/hectares will remain native/untouched/wilderness?''' - 5
* '''How many acres/hectares has been restored?''' 61 (proposed)
* '''What is the status of your project’s governance structure, or DAO (decentralized autonomous organization)? What support do you need to develop it further?'''  The organisation to run the Community Land Trust is not yet formed however there is stong support, an identified founding group of local residents and one cohousing group.  The Area Action Plan (the planning policy) for the site is in the final stages of sign off. Outline planning permission was submitted in July 2021 but has not yet approved. We at Collaborative Housing (CoHoHub), a non-profit enabling hub for citizen-led housing in the Thames Valley, were commissioned by the District Council in 2019 to build the feasibility case for three scenarios of community ownership and governance through Community Land Trust mechanisms. Preliminary costings have been undertaken for these approaches. [https://collaborativehousing.org.uk/2020/07/07/new-research-report-community-land-trust-options-at-the-oxfordshire-cotswolds-garden-village.html] The vision is strong and large amounts of public money has been ploughed into this scheme, however, because it has been led by large-scale institutional finance within a traditional development environment, every step of the journey has been a struggle for the vision to meet reality on the ground. Like many large strategic schemes there is little requirement for long-term stewardship and ownership of assets that build common wealth, in addition to a lack of trust in the ability of the 'community' to run an effective estate management office. Despite the policy requirement for community land value capture and participation, past schemes by this developer indicate that without a persuasive alternative approah they will look to sell the maintenance and management rights to a private company with nominal/infrequent participation from unpaid neighbourhood representatives. Support need: The Salt Cross Garden Village Trust needs business-case development support (paid researchers/facilitators time, legal incorporation costs) to prototype large-scale governance approaches as a proof-of-concept on how residents and the neighbouring village could run their community and build common wealth. At this stage we are using the definition of ‘Autonomy’ within DAO as freedom to govern, however we are interested in how regenerative finance could trial new forms of autonomous relationships through staking and voting operations as new residents move into the scheme and the developers slowly phase out. We require support in  building a DAO from scratch and lack technological/coding capabilities, although we have significant experience in cooperative place-based development and real-world community management so we tend to lean closer to the approaches we have found outlined in the [DisCO.coop](http://DisCO.coop) Manifesto. CoHoHub does not have funding for this early prototyping and by the time funding would be received through the land uplift and forecasted home sales (planning obligations, infrastructure levy) it will be many years too late to make the case for these approaches from a standing start. We would like to run a one year pilot to assemble and incorporate the trust as an online/offline entity, incorporating learning from being part of the Regen Civics Incubator on how to manage discussion and decisions in a large-scale distributed way, and build upon a regenerative treasury to enable this neighbourhood to thrive across decades. As we progress through the Incubator we would aim to build a partnership with the developer so that we are lining this Trust up to be the obvious choice for asset transfer.
* '''How are you integrating with the local community in your area?'''  The existing small village of Eynsham, with origins back to records from 571CE, has a population of just under 5000 people. As a satellite-village that must contribute to meeting Oxford’s unmet housing need, this population will be doubled with the new Garden Village across the next decade, representing the most significant and rapid change in the village's recent history. The crux of much community discontent is due to the ecological impacts and the predicted disconnecting-effect of the busy existing A-road which will separate the old and new parts of the village through the middle. CoHoHub have been building relationships and running events with key community members for four years and one of our team-members has lived in the village for over a decade. Interviews in our 2019-20 report indicated strong community support for the creation of a Community Land Trust, with a very active local group applying pressure on ecology and energy approaches, of which for them a wealth-building community land trust is a key part. We believe that growing a trust for the whole of Eynsham would have a strong bonding effect between new and old communities as this large urban extension is built across the next decade.
* '''How many people does your project need to maintain or run the property, and are there limits to growth or how many people can live on the land? How many people are currently involved in your project?''' Based on similarly-sized communities analysed in the 2019-20 research period, we propose a professional estate management team of 15 staff members once the entire freehold ownership of the trust is transferred (approximately 2032). This team would grow year-on-year from one community organiser in 2022, through a staff of five once the first 50ha has been transferred, a staff of ten with half the land transferred and finally 15 employees running a trust with 5000 active and engaged members (assuming 50% engagement at large annual gatherings, a significant improvement on local electoral structures). This team would be suplemented by contracting-out services to various local companies for maintaining natural and community assets on site. The limit to growth is fixed by the planning permission to 2,200 homes and our costings indicate the need for roughly 0.045% on Gross Development Value to maintain a professional team and the annual maintenance costs. The number of residents required for successful and engaging distributed governance is harder to quantify and we will look to Letchworth Garden City Heritage Foundation’s learning in participatory budgeting, strategic planning, as well as events and festivals throughout the year. There are roughly 10 people as a core group. 5 of those are in a cohousing group. A further 20 or so are in the local action group that we've been working with.
* '''Have you addressed zoning, building codes, and taxes?''' The Master Developer, Grosvenor Developments Ltd, is dealing with the planning process and any levies/taxes on behalf of their landowner clients. These costs will be passed onto the sales price and projected rental cashflow of the homes on site and so the residents will carry the long-term burden of decisions taken today. Where cohousing groups are involved in direct-delivery of parts of the site they will require a separate business model which we are capable of supporting them with. Planning policy in England has insufficient requirements for zero carbon building or long-term governance, and so often these elements are squeezed in favour of retaining land price or developer profit. The inadequacy of policy therefore has a strong impact on our plans and we have to look elsewhere in the model to demonstrate value and cost-cutting (e.g. reduced need for sales team budgets with residents identified, reduced need for risky up-front finance with resident-capital employed, increased density due to more shared facilities etc.).
* '''Have you addressed zoning, building codes, and taxes?''' Our Stewardship Assessment appraised the management and maintenance of the trust through a number of approaches including an endowment, land value capture through planning obligations, annual grants, resident bonds, service charges and ground rents. It is likely that the trust will utilise an endowment from the development model alongside an annual service charge on residents as the principle mechanisms for covering annual costs including corporation tax and other property taxes. Council taxes will be covered by households. The trust will own and operate the 600 social rented properties on site and will take on government grant in order to do this.
* '''What kind of funding are you looking for and what are you looking to do with it?''' At this group-building phase we are looking for $65,000 grant-funding, not necessarily through the RCA in it's entirety. This would include the hiring of the first community organiser ($32,500), who would build support for incorporating the trust ($6,000) through a set of group-building events across 2022 and 2023 ($7,000) and progress the work on stewardship costs/values to build a credible argument for asset ownership ($19,500). We believe that after this phase we will be able to leverage funding from the Master Developer, Grosvenor, through the site-wide business model. CoHoHub is incubated within a Charity that has been in existence for over 100 years and so accounting would be over-seen by a Board of Trustees and supported by the Charity's administrative functions.
* '''What level of experience do you have budgeting for and actualizing a place-based/regenerative development? Do you need support designing plans and / or itemizing costs?''' I am a land trust advisor accredited with the Chartered Institute of Housing, with experience of assisting the setting up of 14 community trusts and cohousing groups since 2013 alongside published research for national bodies and funding institutions. Our support offer for CLTs and cohousing groups includes workshops and reporting on visioning, organisational development (primarily using sociocratic patterns), business planning, stakeholder influencing, and readying a group for being part of the design/construction team. Trained as an architect, I co-founded the hub for our sub-region (CoHoHub) which included building a business model for UK Government start-up grant-funding in 2019. Through this grant we have so far supported 26 groups in various stages of creating citizen-led homes across the Thames Valley, from single-house rental co-operatives to a 100-home urban-fringe eco development. This support was catalysed by the formation of a discussion and project management platform in 2020 as we pivoted to online support . Our team are experts at construction and development modelling, with subscriptions to development appraisal software for budgeting. One of our team also has an extensive stewardship business planning skillset having worked at the leading UK organisation at forming management trusts. The biggest scheme that we are actively project managing in construction is a 42-home affordable housing site in a small town so this project represents a step-up in ambition that we will need to leverage partnerships on. We require assistance on business planning and community management at a larger scale, ideation on innovative governance models, and approaches to establishing, building and managing a treasury with regenerative finance approaches. We will certainly need help tuning exactly how the RCA could help us achieve our aims and so some refininement of costing may be needed.
* '''What do you think RCA should be looking for when selecting the 12 place-based/regenerative development projects in this first cohort of applicants?''' Innovative experimentation (trying new things around regenerative ecovillages), including projects with a high potential of moving to action on an idea (but not excluding some risky experiments), equitable land ownership mechanisms (community/natural wealth-building meanwhile, short and long-term), if short-term a clear plan for bridging the short and long term as important to regenerative approaches.
* '''How do you personally want to support the 12+ projects in the alliance's first cohort and at what capacity and commitment level?''' Along with the above indicated skills, I can provide examples from the English experience of developing trusts, with knowledge of projects across rural and urban areas from the beginning of the Garden Cities movement (late 19th Century). I sit on the Research and Teaching group of the Center for CLT Innovation so I can leverage experience from our advisors who have international experience, maintain the directory of CLTs worldwide and operate TerraNostra press who (quite literally) wrote the book on CLTs. I can also offer design critique having co-run an architecture practice since 2015 which focuses on participatory and regenerative housing. I would have a few hours a month to be part of this cohort.
==[https://TraditionalDreamFactory.com Traditional Dream Factory] (member of [https://oasa.earth Oasa])==
{{#ev:youtube|https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Y5lcicL8Oc}}
* '''Representative:''' [https://samueldelesque.me Samuel Delesque]
* '''Location:''' [https://bit.ly/find-tdf Abela, Portugal]
* 
'''How is the place-based/regenerative development project(s) you're representing regenerative? This may be a helpful resource: https://www.regenlive.org/what-is-regenerative:'''
**1. The land will be owned by a non profit, land trust emulating DAO structure in Switzerland, which enforces our [https://docs.google.com/document/d/1wqKMvYEC7A-gvsGUhduXGXw1WkClpvX_Z8mqSKdMGYQ/edit Regenerative Land use agreement]
**2. We are creating systems to enable self sufficiency and regeneration. [https://traditionaldreamfactory.com/impact-map See our Impact Map]
* '''What values, goals, and focus areas are guiding your place-based regenerative project?'''  We are empowering creativity, prototyping, play - creating a container for our members to grow and develop regenerative ways of living.
* '''Is the property/land associated with this project currently owned privately, publicly or cooperatively?'''  It is currently owned privately with an agreement to transfer into a non profit.
* '''What is the long-term ownership intention of this property/land: private, public, cooperative, fractional?'''  Non profit land trust emulating structure with a utility token granting members access to the space.
* '''What is your legal structure? What type of or combination of legal entities will your project use to protect the land and the members?''' Land title > Local ops company > Swiss non profit > DAO
* '''How many acres/hectares is this project?'''  25ha
* '''How many acres/hectares is native/untouched/wilderness?'''  0%
* '''How many acres/hectares will remain native/untouched/wilderness?'''  50% wild, 45% food forests and other forestry systems, 5% development.
* '''How many acres/hectares has been restored?'''  1.5ha reforested so far
* '''What is the status of your project’s governance structure, or DAO (decentralized autonomous organization)? What support do you need to develop it further?'''  We are establishing sociocracy principles and developing our token and setting up our DAO stack as an ongoing process, and expect to have all structures finalized by end of year.
* '''How are you integrating with the local community in your area?'''  Yes - we host events for the village, and the villagers love us. We have several villagers involved in building the project.
* '''How many people does your project need to maintain or run the property, and are there limits to growth or how many people can live on the land? How many people are currently involved in your project?'''  We aim to be able to host up to 30 people in the first zone (coliving project), though we are a transition space and people come and go. We are geared towards mid-term stays. Last year we had 400 visitors.
* '''Have you addressed zoning, building codes, and taxes?'''  We are waiting on final approval from city hall, but since it's just a change a use of existing buildings it's not as much of a burden as building from scratch.
* '''What kind of funding are you looking for and what are you looking to do with it?''' The total project cost is roughly 3M. We are looking to raise 0.5M this summer to get started with insulating the living building, building a natural pool, building grey and black water systems so that we can up-cycle as much water as possible, building out a mushroom farm etc. See roadmap on website.
* '''What level of experience do you have budgeting for and actualizing a place-based/regenerative development? Do you need support designing plans and / or itemizing costs?''' As co-founders of [https://re-build.co re:build] we have plenty of resources in the network, though always interested in connecting more dots and getting more people involved.
* '''What do you think RCA should be looking for when selecting the 12 place-based/regenerative development projects in this first cohort of applicants?''' Love the questions so far, really important to nail the legal structure, to have the permits, and to ensure the focus has good governance mechanisms. Would recommend developing some for of Impact Score - this is something we are interested in building into the platform we are creating for regenerative communities ([https://closer.earth Closer]) - even a simple first evaluation that can then be upgraded with each cohort.
* '''How do you personally want to support the 12+ projects in the alliance's first cohort and at what capacity and commitment level?''' Would love to give out free access to Closer platform as well as provide support through re:build network.
==Liminal Village==
{{#ev:youtube|https://youtu.be/XdhPXocPf9g}}
* '''Representative: Laura van Wijngaarden, Roberto Valenti, Jillian Hovey'''
*'''Videos''': [https://youtu.be/XdhPXocPf9g 2030 Vision] [https://youtu.be/xIC_wGnDEkE Liminal Village Vibes]
* '''Location:''' Italy
* 
'''How is the place-based/regenerative development project(s) you're representing regenerative? [https://www.regenlive.org/what-is-regenerative This may be a helpful resource]:'''
**On the Personal level: we make use of regenerative practices for the body, the spirit, the community and the planet. Our wholistic understanding of “regenerative” includes the regeneration of humans as integral to the process. We are shifting the paradigm from homo economicus to a wholistic multi-scale human, which strives to balance his/her contribution on the personal, local, and global level.
**On the Local level: Liminal Village is a regenerative eco-tech hub, fully powered by solar energy,  and insulated by hemp. We have constructed a water collection system where all water falling on any hard surfaces on the property is collected into several water basins. The collected water is kept ‘alive’, continuously aerated, circulated and filtered by our own open-source biochar water filtration system. We are experimenting with both high-tech precision farming (eg: farmbot, hydroponics) and low-tech permaculture technologies (no-till gardens, swales, keyline plowing, regenerative grazing, etc. ). We are designing cheap and sustainable housing units (underground or lightweight suspended structures, which won’t require building permits thus accessible to all). We aim to kickstart a regenerative network by sharing the acquired know-how, materials and workforce with the new hubs, which lifts up the knowledge of the traditional Italian cultivation practices, while stimulating and informing it with permaculture knowledge that will help us co-create wholistic regenerative patterns over time. 
**On the Global level: we aim to actively co-create the next human coordination paradigm, a regenerative network starting from interdependent physical sustainable initiatives and hubs, and supporting the whole by creating open digital and physical infrastructures to connect them to form a holistic “superorganism”. We enhance the resilience of the network through a long-term, multi- and Inter-generational approach, focusing on interdependence and long-term diversification and adaptability of each hub. Every hub has the responsibility of aiding new hubs around their location, growing the network regenerative capacity by exchanging knowledge, tools and resources between them. On that mindset, we have recently purchased a former brick factory and a quarry, which has more than 6000 cubic meters of building permit, and which will be the next eco-tech village of our network. This is where we would like to use web3 technologies to tokenise the property, track contributions, do governance and to put Ostrom’s principles into practice to turn the location into a common. This regenerative hub will also function as the main maker site for the open source life-supporting technologies (energy, housing, food, water) for the entire network.
* '''What values, goals, and focus areas are guiding your place-based regenerative project?'''
**Research and develop replicable, open-source, high- and low-tech systems which help meet objective human needs.
**Facilitate the transition from private to common ownership, focusing on regenerative "real-value" economies, by utilising Ostrom’s principles, ReFi and web3 technologies.
**Apply an Integral, wholistic mindset to every problem and solution
**Kickstart a regenerative bioregional network with a regenerative economy based on Real Value.
**Being a model and a source of inspiration and support for others and to grow the local, bioregional, national, and international network
**Lifting up and use the best of Game A, while we bring Game B to Life
**Use wholistic permaculture design, for both land and human ecologies
**Use natural cycles/biomimicry to guide our processes
**Moving from competition & scarcity to collaboration & abundance
**Using Non-dualism (“both and”) and non-coercion as guiding principles
**Learning from group dynamics, guide and encourage people to balance being (shadow work, transgenerational patterns) and doing (Ikigai, collaboration, gifting)
* '''Is the property/land associated with this project currently owned privately, publicly or cooperatively?'''
**Currently the locations are privately owned, but they represent an "asset investment" in the network.
* '''What is the long-term ownership intention of this property/land: private, public, cooperative, fractional?'''
**We aim to facilitate the creation of new hubs as community places, fractionally owned by the network cooperative (which supports it with resources and knowledge), the stewards (who monitor,  maintain and improve the hubs), and resource investors (who funded the endeavour with money, time, land or other resources unavailable to the network). Every node is currently privately owned, with an exit-to-community strategy. The brick factory complex will be  turned into a collectively owned eco-tech makerspace/village, proportionally owned by anyone who contributes to it.
* '''What is your legal structure? What type of or combination of legal entities will your project use to protect the land and the members?'''
**Every hub in the network has or will have its own independent non-profit association or social enterprise with a clearly defined and interrelated social purpose (its DNA). This is to enrich autonomy and agency. All hubs will join as a member of a  (platform) cooperative to perform mutualized exchanges of tools, goods and services with each other, creating an exchange network of non-profit associations and social enterprises.
* '''How many acres/hectares is this project?'''
**A total of ± 9 hectares.
* '''How many acres/hectares is native/untouched/wilderness?'''
**4 hectares
* '''How many acres/hectares will remain native/untouched/wilderness?'''
**> 5 hectares(rewilding, afforestation)
* '''How many acres/hectares has been restored?'''
**3 hectares are regenerating
* '''What is the status of your project’s governance structure, or DAO (decentralized autonomous organization)? What support do you need to develop it further?'''
**Although we have experimented with a DAO, so far we did not have a necessity to actively use it for decision making, since we have been experimenting with community self-governance for 28 lunar cycles (lunations) where the local temporary community proposes and chooses the patterns which resonate the most. Across associations, we are experimenting with a soft version of sociocracy/holacracy, where every association makes independent decisions. Having a well tested and simple-to-use DHO system will be required to make the transition from local initiatives to a bioregional regenerative network.
* '''How are you integrating with the local community in your area?'''
**We have co-created and stewarded a common kindergarten hub with 24 families, who share their bioregional “Zone 1” (traveling to it twice a day, 5 days a week) 
**We helped to develop the site with tools, workforce, knowledge and mindset, and crowdfunding of school building.
**We purchased part of the land so it has the security to continue to develop into a regen community node.
**We use the common space to invite locals to regenerative workshops, lectures and activities. 
**We take part in a small food cooperative which produces flour, chickpeas, pasta, olive oil; and a permaculture center. 
**We are co-founding a perinatal integral health/coworking space for mothers (to be) together with the local community
**We have regular meetings (weekly/monthly, depending on the proximity) with people from local and bioregional communities (we will soon include municipalities). 
**During this summer we are organising a bioregional gathering to discuss and showcase a variety of regenerative subjects, including agriculture, technology, health and networking, a ReFi conference in Bologna, and a hackathon for smart villages.
* '''How many people does your project need to maintain or run the property, and are there limits to growth or how many people can live on the land? How many people are currently involved in your project?'''
**The expenses and taxation are the responsibility of the hub stewards. In the majority of cases, these can be fully covered by revenues of ecotourism during summer time.  Property taxes are relatively low and manageable for our network because all locations are primary residences of the stewards, which gives tax advantages.  Liminal Village and the kindergarten are both on land zoned rural residential / agriculture. We are developing legal associations for these properties which will change the zoning to Institutional, and will allow education centers to be developed, which will accommodate more buildings. The brick factory, on the other hand has more than 6000 cubic meters of building permit for touristic/residential area, in a location close to the main city (8 min away from the city center, 20 min from Liminal Village). 
* '''Have you addressed zoning, building codes, and taxes?'''
**We are currently looking for structures for the crypto-community to invest in “real value” (i.e. based on actual resources), aiding the manifestation of this network by staking assets to empower the creation of new hubs within the network. Their funds would be backing a network of interdependent initiatives, rather than funding an individual initiative. Besides  access to the locations, and rights to the produce and services of the regenerative network, the investor can get fractional ownership of the real estate properties, which will necessarily increase in value due to the regeneration practice. We would use the funds to purchase tools, materials and machinery which will be shared across the local nodes in the network in order to expand as fast as we can. We estimate we would need a minimum of 1M euros to kickstart the network effectively.
* '''Have you addressed zoning, building codes, and taxes?'''
**Same question as above
* '''What kind of funding are you looking for and what are you looking to do with it?'''
**We are currently looking for structures for the crypto-community to invest in “real value” (i.e. based on actual resources), aiding the manifestation of this network by staking assets to empower the creation of new hubs within the network. Their funds would be backing a network of interdependent initiatives, rather than funding an individual initiative. Besides  access to the locations, and rights to the produce and services of the regenerative network, the investor can get fractional ownership of the real estate properties, which will necessarily increase in value due to the regeneration practice. We would use the funds to purchase tools, materials and machinery which will be shared across the local nodes in the network in order to expand as fast as we can. We estimate we would need a minimum of 1M euros to kickstart the network effectively
* '''What level of experience do you have budgeting for and actualizing a place-based/regenerative development? Do you need support designing plans and / or itemizing costs?'''
**This vision has been in the works for many years, and we have transitioned into the physical plane with a budget and resources. To date, all works have been self-funded or crowd-funded. We have the support of an experienced construction company manager in our community, who is nearing retirement, and wanting to transition to applying his knowledge and skills to support the development of sites, and the network overall. Although we have acquired a good deal of experience in the development of our Liminal Village site so far, we are always learning. We have the support of a very experienced permaculture and ecovillage designer and community facilitator, so we are learning with her, and are wanting to host on-going educational programmes, and learners, with a focus on potential community members. We will require a scalable accounting system which will function as an overview of the resources and needs of the network.
* '''What do you think RCA should be looking for when selecting the 12 place-based/regenerative development projects in this first cohort of applicants?'''
**Vision, innovation, diversity, local and global collaboration, shared values, replicable solutions, feasibility, scaling opportunities, vicinity to other initiatives, strategic  location for impact, web3 literacy, integral approach (4 quadrants)
* '''How do you personally want to support the 12+ projects in the alliance's first cohort and at what capacity and commitment level?'''
**Experience with crypto prototypes and primitives
**Agent-centric perspectives
**Social aspects of community building
**Technical expertise on smart contracts and tokenomics
**Experience with using tokens in a community settings
**Mentorship from Elders on our team
**Support in developing the ecology of RCA


{{#ev:vimeo|https://vimeo.com/705005828/ce9fb5db7a}}
{{#ev:vimeo|https://vimeo.com/705005828/ce9fb5db7a}}

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