Oxford cohousing? | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Charles Nuckolls (administrator![]() |
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Date: Wed, 22 May 2013 22:52:13 -0700 (PDT) |
Are there any cohousing groups in the vicinity of Oxford (UK)? I will be there for three weeks in July, and would enjoy meeting them. Thanks, Charles W. Nuckolls Provo, UT ________________________________ From: Diana Leafe Christian <diana [at] ic.org> To: cohousing-l [at] cohousing.org Sent: Tuesday, May 21, 2013 6:20 AM Subject: [C-L]_ Lovely UK Cohousing Network conference at Threshold Centre Cohousing, Dorset Hello, Here's a quick report for coho-L folks on this list. The UK Cohousing Network conference was lovely, and seemingly quite successful. About 45 cohousers from all over England and Wales gathered at a beautiful small cohousing community, Threshold Centre, in a rural area of Dorset in southern England. Various board members, including Mark Westcombe, whom many North American cohousers met at past Coho/US conferences, gave introductory presentations. I did a keynote talk on governance & decision-making on Friday afternoon, and a workshop on Saturday. In the various breakout workshops on Sunday morning a UK Sociocracy Network trainer, James Priest, and I gave an introduction to Sociocracy. After lunch James and I did an informal consultation with a forming community, Bridport Cohousing, also in southern England, who are using most parts of Sociocracy now. As far as I know, Bridport is the only cohousing community using Sociocracy. I met Maria, with the Older Women's Cohousing project in London, whom many US cohousers have met too, at one of the Coho/US conferences. And Peter, the partner of Sarah Berger, from Laughton Lodge, whom some US cohousers have also met. I had a great time with Mark, who's on the UK Cohousing Network board, and whom, I suspect, was instrumental in the network's inviting me to present at their conference. He's doing well! And his community in Lancaster, Forge Bank, is now 8 months past move-in, with two units still available. The Threshold Centre is both a cohousing community and a sustainability education center, with a 300-year old timberframed farmhouse with stone floors as their absolutely beautiful Common House. They have 21 very small two-story "row house" English-cottage-style units, some created from existing buildings and some newly built. The place is charming and lovely, just like one would imagine in a buccolic pastoral English countryside. Their hospitality was superb and their food was delicious. It seems the relatively new and small UK Cohousing Network is doing well. Yesterday I did a workshop for Laughton Lodge Cohousing near Lewes in East Sussex, another southern England county. They have the largest and most amenity-filled Common House I've seen. The founders retrofitted a rural hospital with three large U-shaped two-story wards. They converted the wards into 21 one and two-bedroom units with lovely tall ceilings. Two and three-story "English cottage"-looking buildings. And converted the whole hospital building into their common house with . . . a kitchen and dining room, large living room with view of their 25-acre meadow, classroom, many offices which residents rent. three whole apartments for cohousing families, several guest rooms, a laundry room, and a large dance floor/basketball court with a polished wooden floor. The _reason_ it's so big and has so many amenities is that it was there already and an obvious choice for a Common House. (And the cost to even just demolish it 15 years ago would have been 80 pounds.) Laughton Lodge is also home to horses, chickens, and I think pigs also. It was the first (or almost-first) cohousing community in the UK, and its founders wanted to create it without knowing about cohousing yet, but they soon found out. As Sarah Berger shared in her slide shows at Coho/US conferences, the first few families sold their homes in order to buy the place, but the 2-story ward buildings weren't livable yet, and they needed places to live. So they all camped out in the moldy and then-falling-down hospital building, and slowly renovated it. Those were the days! Lots of stories and reminiscences about how difficult/rewarding/heart-warming/bonding it was. ;) So far I'm loving England and the lovely, hospitable people I'm meeting. Diana P.S. Ann, Jo Gooding, the director of the UK Cohousing Network will contacting you about Cohousing Collabortative's Timeline Game. ;) _________________________________________________________________ Cohousing-L mailing list -- Unsubscribe, archives and other info at: http://www.cohousing.org/cohousing-L/
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Lovely UK Cohousing Network conference at Threshold Centre Cohousing, Dorset Diana Leafe Christian, May 21 2013
- Oxford cohousing? Charles Nuckolls, May 22 2013
- Re: Oxford cohousing? Ann Zabaldo, May 23 2013
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