Before designing any community, regenerative practitioners should study the land stewardship traditions of the people who lived on that land before. In Taos and across the American Southwest, the acequia tradition of communal water governance represents centuries of refined community land management — a system that has outlasted empires and colonial disruptions.

Acequias are community-managed irrigation ditches. What makes them extraordinary is not the earthworks themselves but the governance structure that maintains them: shared labor obligations, community voting on water allocation, elected mayordomo leadership, and cultural norms of mutual aid. This is regenerative governance in practice, evolved over many generations.

Modern regenerative community design learns from these traditions — not by copying them, but by understanding the underlying principles and letting them inform new designs for new contexts.

“We do not inherit the land from our ancestors — we borrow it from our children.”

— Indigenous Proverb