What are we looking for when we commission a new column? It varies wildly. In many cases the projects surprise and often tickle us – we’re after something that we’ve not come across before. When Oliver Milman suggested a column about car-free developments in the US it was immediately fascinating; it came on the back of some very depressing reporting on how the demand for parking spaces (eight spaces for every car!) has dominated the way US housing and cities are designed. Some columns are about communities who are trying to create something brand new, such as Bude’s climate jury or New Orleans’ Lighthouse project. It is inspiring to see how these local communities are finding their own way. We’ll come back to these projects in a couple of years’ time to see what the outcomes were, and whether the centre held together. Some are bold, even apparently bonkers ideas, like the Dutch housing project which plans to generate heat from its sewers, or the architects who want to put gardens on the rooftops of Paris. But we also wanted, as often as possible, to find ideas and projects that had been in place for a couple of years, like the Bus Rapid Transit system in Jakarta, Indonesia, a public transport infrastructure that now covers more than 251km and costs 18p a trip. For this week’s column, writer Stephen Burgen got in touch after he’d been to the Spanish city of Vitoria-Gasteiz (pictured above), because he’d been so impressed by the work they’d been doing for decades on making it as green as possible. The ideas and stories come in thick and fast – always more than we can cover. But it’s immensely cheering to turn to the column after a day of dealing with scientific studies highlighting the potential devastation to come. These stories are living, breathing solutions which are already part of people’s lives. Change happens slowly – and then all at once. Bibi van der Zee is an assistant editor on the Guardian’s environment desk Read more from The alternatives: |