Rebuild Green is the concluding part of a three-stage plan by the Common Ground Collective.
Rebuild Green is meant to help residents of New Orleans and elsewhere along the Gulf Coast create homes, employment and an environment that are sustainable in the 21st century. In so doing, Rebuild Green is working to regenerate New Orleans.
Elements of this Circle of Regeneration are:
Safe, Strong Housing that can withstand the next storm and flood.
Rebuild Green will offer several means of construction that are economical and environmentally friendly to residents of New Orleans' Upper and Lower 9th Wards and elsewhere along the Gulf Coast. Among these are Structural Concrete Integrated Panels (SCIPS), Organic Compounds (such as cobb construction, and rice and straw as matrix material), and Structural Steel Frameworks. Rebuild Green will also offer means of elevating any new or resurrected housing at least 8 feet high against the next storm or flood.
Renewable-energy Features
Rebuild Green and the Common Ground Collective are assembling several options that offer renewable energy to residents of New Orleans and the Gulf Coast. Among these are solar panels (thermal and electric), water turbines, and wind turbines. For example, roofs of the Common Ground Woodlands complex have space for 65,000 square feet of solar panels.
Low-income Employment Investments
Construction and Rebuild Green are combining to train and employ residents in the regeneration of hard-hit and high-risk areas. The programs we offer will particularly recruit ex-offenders from the criminal-justice system and will particularly target storm-damaged area such as New Orleans' Lower and Upper 9th Wards.
Employment and Training
Invest Construction and Rebuild Green are combining to train and employ residents in the regeneration of hard-hit and high-risk areas. The programs we offer will particularly recruit ex-offenders from the criminal-justice system and particularly target storm-damaged area such as New Orleans' Lower and Upper 9th Wards.
Wetlands Restoration
Regeneration of wetlands' natural protection of urban environments against hurricanes and storm-surges is vital to making southeast Louisiana sustainable in the 21st century. As one step, on July 6th and 7th of 2006 the Common Ground Collective and the Mayor's Office of New Orleans combined to plant 3000 units of smooth-cord grass (or startina alterna flora) in the Bayou
Sauvage Wildlife Refuge. Such efforts are expected to continue and increase.
Bioremediation
After Hurricane Katrina, the flooding of New Orleans that came from breached levees let loose miles and months of 'Toxic Flood Water'. The Meg Perry Memorial Garden of the Common Ground Collective is raising organic crops and remediating the soil in its Gentilly location. Elsewhere, sunflower and mustard plants are drawing toxic metals out of the earth, while the use of Efficient Micro-organisms is working against mold in houses gutted by Common Ground volunteers.
In sum, Rebuild Green and Invest Construction make up the stage meant to add roots to the work done by Common Ground founders and volunteers from September 2005 onward. Using new tools and ancient methods, our work is meant to help those roots flourish through branches and flowerings in the 21st century.
Please contribute in any way that you can. Donations specifically for Rebuild Green projects can be sent to POB 74-1365, New Orleans, LA 70014. Donations are tax deductable through Rebuild Greens fiscal agent Global Exchange.
All content graciously provided by Rebuild Green New Orleans.
Rebuild Green is presenting residents of New Orleans with new choices for construction in their rebuilding efforts. We are focusing on Structural Concrete Integrated Panels, also known as SCIPs or SKIPs, as a major component for rebuilding housing units that were devastated by storm or flood.
SCIP panels offer the following advantages:
Southeast Louisiana is a prime place for solar panels and water turbines that could replace power generated through fossil-fuels such as oil and gas.
Southeast Louisiana's massive amounts of annual sunshine and river and tidal flows could produce more than enough energy to remove oil and gas from the needs of commercial and residential users.
One resident of New Orlean's 8th Ward added just two solar panels in March 2006, producing 300 kilowatts for his house on Mandeville Street, at a cost of $1000, and immediately went off the grid.
Rebuild Green and Common Ground's Invest program are working with low-income residents of New Orleans and with skilled volunteers to teach construction trade skills, provide employment, and revive neighborhoods hard-hit by storms, flooding and neglect.
Rebuild Green will work with the Common Ground Collective's Wetlands Restoration project by contributing funds from 20% of Rebuild Green's net profits into the project and by informing clients of the projects' work.
The Wetlands Restoration project, begun by Justin Hite and Jessica Neiderer, surveyed land surrounding New Orleans between April and July 2006 and formed alliances with already existing groups (such as Save Our Wetlands) intent on similar, remedial purposes.
bi·o·re·me·di·a·tion (bī'ō-rĭ-mē'dē-ā'shən)
n. The use of biological agents, such as bacteria or plants, to remove or neutralize contaminants, as in polluted soil or water.
The housing that Rebuild Green rebuilds in New Orleans will be on land inundated with 'Toxic Flood Water' (the 'TFW' scrawled on thousands of homes' fronts) in September of 2005. The Upper and Lower 9th Wards, New Orleans East, and Central City all "took" at least three feet of water than subsequently stood for weeks afterward.