This week on Under the Radar with Callie Crossley:
COVID-19 might make all the headlines, but another crisis is afoot: loneliness. Living through the pandemic has only exacerbated chronic loneliness by creating a world of isolation and social distancing. Can ecovillages — a unique model fostering community and connection — be one answer?
Ecovillage cohousing communities have been popular in Europe for decades, but interest here in the United States is ramping up. These communities are designed to integrate sustainability into all aspects of community living, and to create strong bonds between neighbors who all collaborate in the decision-making for the group.
Residents of three local communities share their communal experiences and why, post-pandemic, there is even more interest in this model of living.
GUESTS:
Dave Shevett, resident and one of the founders of Mosaic Commons, a cohousing neighborhood, part of the Sawyer Hill Ecovillage in Berlin, Massachusetts.
Sarah Heile, resident of Camelot Cohousing, also part of the Sawyer Hill Ecovillage in Berlin, Massachusetts.
Steve Chiasson, resident of Belfast Cohousing and Ecovillage in Belfast, Maine.