- 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
A regenerative community’s most irreplaceable asset is the knowledge of its experienced members — how the water systems work and what goes wrong seasonally, how the food forest was planted and what succeeds in this specific microclimate, how the community’s governance culture developed and what conflicts taught the community about itself.
Knowledge transmission requires intentional systems: documented operating procedures for all infrastructure, mentorship relationships between experienced and new members, community story archives that preserve institutional memory, and formal education programs (like Pangea Academy) that transmit practical knowledge to new generations.
Communities that invest in knowledge documentation and transmission are significantly more resilient to the departure of key members than those that allow critical knowledge to remain undocumented in individuals’ heads. Documentation is an act of stewardship.
“The best communities are not those that started with the most resources, but those that learned the most from their experience and built systems to transmit those lessons forward.”
— Community development practitioner
