Rat and Mouse
Tue
26
Jun
The Slow Home Movement

If you yearn for better urban planning as much as the Rat and Mouse does, you might enjoy The Slow Home Movement.

Slow Home is a critical and much needed alternative to the standardised world of cookie cutter houses and instant neighborhoods. Suburban sprawl is like fast food, cheap and easy but also unsatisfying and boring. These places are shallow substitutes for homes and neighborhoods with meaning and depth. They are created by big businesses that are more interested in profits rather than people. Like fast food, they are bad for us, our families, and the environment.

Founder John Brown is an architect and estate agent. The website is interesting and functional, with plenty of video, and a "ten steps" programme for building or choosing your slow home:

1. GO INDEPENDENT
Avoid homes by big developers and large production builders. They are designed for profit not people. Work with independent designers and building contractors instead.

2. GO LOCAL
Avoid home finishing products from big box retailers. The standardized solutions they provide cannot fit the unique conditions of your home. Use local retailers, craftspeople, and manufacturers to get a locally appropriate response and support your community.

3. GO GREEN
Stop the conversion of nature into sprawl. Don’t buy in a new suburb. The environmental cost can no longer be justified. Re-invest in existing communities and use sustainable materials and technologies to reduce your environmental footprint.

4. GO NEAR
Reduce your commute. Driving is a waste of time and the new roads and services required to support low density development is a big contributor to climate change. Live close to where you work and play.

5. GO SMALL
Avoid the real estate game of bigger is always better. A properly designed smaller home can feel larger AND work better than a poorly designed big one. Spend your money on quality instead of quantity.

6. GO OPEN
Stop living in houses filled with little rooms. They are dark, inefficient, and don’t fit the complexity of our daily lives. Live in a flexible and adaptive open plan living space with great light and a connection to outdoors.

7. GO SIMPLE
Don’t buy a home that has space you won’t use and things you don’t need. Good design can reduce the clutter and confusion in your life. Create a home that fits the way you really want to live.

8. GO MODERN
Avoid fake materials and the re-creation of false historical styles. They are like advertising images and have little real depth. Create a home in which character comes from the quality of space, natural light and the careful use of good, sustainable materials.

9. GO HEALTHY
Avoid living in a public health concern. Houses built with cheap materials off gas noxious chemicals. Suburbs promote obesity because driving is the only option. Use natural, healthy home materials and building techniques. Live where you can walk to shop, school and work.

10. GO FOR IT
Stop procrastinating. The most important, and difficult, step in the slow home process is the first one that you take. Get informed and then get involved with your home. Every change, no matter how small, is important.

The site's American Canadian but it's just as relevant to the UK.

20070626Slowhome

[via WorldChanging]

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Comments

that site is Canadian, actually.

Posted by Sarah at June 26, 2007 10:56 PM

Comments

This is an interesting site. It is very refreshing to see a site that engages property and estate agency at a more critical, thoughtful level. I would be very interested in people's thoughts about slow home vis a vis the U.K. We have some British and Scottish architects on the site but I have been curious about the relevance of our suburban criticism/ discussion given the very different age and form of our cities. Any comments would be much appreciated.

Thanks for posting the article on slow home.

Posted by John Brown, Slow Home Editor at June 27, 2007 10:19 PM


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