- Beyond Sustainability - The Case for Regenerative Design
- Understanding Place - Climate, Site, and Solar Geometry
- The Six Integrated Systems - An Overview
- Building with the Earth—Natural Materials
- Passive Solar Design - Heating and Cooling Without Machines
- Off-Grid Energy Systems - Power from the Sun
- Water - Catching, Storing, and Cycling
- Liquid Waste Treatment - Botanical Systems
- Food Systems—Buildings That Feed
- Community Design - Scaling Up
- The Integrated Design Process
- Appendix A: Glossary of Key Terms
- Appendix B: The Pangea Textbook Series
- Appendix C: Key Design Principles at a Glance
- The Regenerative Community Vision
- Site Assessment and Land Reading
- Land Use Law and Legal Frameworks
- Master Planning for Regenerative Communities
- Infrastructure Systems Integration
- Housing Typologies and Density Design
- Community Governance Structures
- Economic Models for Community Development
- Phased Development Strategy
- Community Resilience and Long-Term Stewardship
- Appendix A: Legal Entity Comparison Chart
- Appendix B: Community Design Checklist
- Appendix C: Glossary of Community Development Terms
The integration of food production into building design is not a new idea. For most of human history, the home and the farm were not separated. Gardens, orchards, and food-producing animals were part of the immediate domestic environment. The industrial separation of food production from domestic life is a historical anomaly of the last century or two, enabled by cheap transportation and large-scale agricultural systems that have produced abundance for many at the cost of enormous ecological damage.
A regenerative building begins to restore this connection. It does not claim to replace the entire food supply of its occupants — that is not a realistic goal for a single building in most climates. But it does produce a meaningful quantity of fresh food year-round, connects its occupants to the biological processes that food depends on, and demonstrates that the boundary between building and garden, between architecture and agriculture, is a choice rather than a necessity.
Food systems in a Pangea building operate at multiple scales: from the herbs growing in interior botanical cells to the banana trees in the greenhouse to exterior garden beds fed by treated waste water to community-scale food production infrastructure shared among multiple households. Book 9 of this series, Food Systems and Growing, covers each of these at the practical design and construction level.
