About the Florida House Institute for Sustainable Development
The Florida House Institute for Sustainable Development is a non-profit organization that works to build civic capacity around a practice of vision-centered, place-based planning for a sustainable future. We view sustainable development as a process of continuous improvement where each new project in a place is measured by its contribution to the desired future. This practice is rooted in:
· Helping people understand whole systems, encompassing the natural, built, economic, and social systems.
· Helping communities act on new understanding through facilitation,research, education, demonstration and implementation.
Our Mission:
To facilitate change for a sustainable future by partnering with others to create a practice of sustainable community development and a learning network of organizations and communities similarly engaged. In addition to practice in our home community, the Institute provides consulting, facilitation and implementation support for neighborhoods, local governments, private developers, and community organizations and initiatives involved in sustainable community development.
Our Message:
It's your future by design or default.
You can have a future you like, rather than the one you’re likely to get.
Our Definition of Sustainable Development:
Sustainable development is a process of continuous improvement by design of natural, built, economic and social systems. This means:
· Nurturing variety and productivity in natural systems;
· Increasing efficiency, using renewable resources and eliminating waste in built systems;
· Using social and environmental goals to create market opportunities ineconomic systems;
· Helping citizens understand whole systems and act on that knowledge in social systems.
Our Work:
We help citizens, entrepreneurs and communities:
· Facilitate visioning and planning processes at different scales: regional, county, town and development project;
· Research what works for sustainable development;
· Educate themselves about whole systems and sustainability principles and practices;
· Demonstrate what works in the unique context of their community to build markets for sustainable development; and
· Implement businesses ventures andchanges in regulatory, market and financial incentives to support sustainable behaviors.
Our Systems Approach:
A comprehensive approach to community sustainability requires understanding the key systems in your community, how they connect to each other, and how to identify the most effective opportunities for change. The Florida House Institute has developed a systems approach to sustainable community development that helps citizens and practitioners be strategic about where and when they choose to act. This method uses a taxonomy of four system layers to understand the challenges and opportunities facing our communities.
Social systems.
These are the formal and informal systems that govern our human relationships and support our physical, psychological and spiritual development. They include our processes for governance and decision-making, knowledge generation, education, health care, culture and spiritual renewal. They are our “social infrastructure” through which we associate with others, develop values, assess wellbeing, plan for the future and take action on our plans.
Economic systems.
These are the systems we use to create wealth, provide services and add value to raw materials. These include firms, markets, economies, capital and currencies, labor markets, knowledge generation and technological innovation.
Built systems.
This is our “built environment,” including buildings (residential, commercial and civic) and infrastructure (water, waste, energy, transportation, and communications). These structures and systems provide space for us to live and work, and facilitate the flows of energy, material, information and people between those spaces.
Natural systems.
These are the systems that are the basis of our physical existence. They include geology, soils, hydrology, water sheds, animal and plant populations and habitats, the air, weather systems, and solar patterns.
A sustainable community development strategy needs to work deliberately in all these systems, and reinforce the flows of energy, material and information that connect them.
Services:
Consulting:
· Planning, at different levels of scale from the project to the region.
· Sustainable development
· Green building
· Water resource planning
Education:
· Seminars and workshops on sustainable development and affordable, livable communities.
· Florida Public Officials Design Institute (in partnership with the FAU Center for Urban and Environmental Solutions).
Facilitation
· Visioning
· Discovery and design charrettes
· Building community capacity.
· Developing community centers for environmental learning and civic engagement.
· Developing tools for community design and decision making.