Regenerative communities share a cluster of characteristics that distinguish them from conventional developments:

Energy autonomy: The community generates more energy than it consumes on an annual basis, with resilient storage and sharing infrastructure.

Water sovereignty: Rainfall and snowmelt are captured, used, cleaned, and returned to the landscape — closing the water loop at the community scale.

Food production: A meaningful fraction of community food is grown on-site, integrating food forests, annual gardens, greenhouse systems, and aquaponics.

Waste as resource: Human waste is composted or processed in constructed wetlands. Solid waste streams are minimized, separated, and largely kept on-site.

Ecological restoration: The community actively improves soil health, biodiversity, and watershed function over time — leaving the land better than it was found.

Governance resilience: Decision-making structures are designed for longevity, conflict resolution, and adaptation — not just initial idealism.

Economic integration: Internal economic activity, skill exchange, and shared ownership structures reduce dependence on external systems.