Permaculture Magazine Award

Der Permaculture Magazine Award geht an Einzelpersonen, Gemeinschaften, Unternehmen, Gruppen und Organisationen, die über einen Zeitraum von mindestens drei Jahren inspirierende Permakulturarbeit vorweisen können.

Verliehen in Zusammenarbeit mit dem Permaculture Magazine.

Gewürdigt werden Permakultur-Projekte, die geschädigtes Land regenerieren sowie Lebensraum und biologische Vielfalt verbessern. Es geht um Projekte, die Menschen helfen, praktische und gemeinschaftliche Fähigkeiten zu erwerben, die den Wert von Produkten steigern und die lokale Wirtschaft entwickeln sowie um Projekte, die die Gemeinschaft aufbauen, sozialen Zusammenhalt und größere wirtschaftliche Resilienz schaffen und neue Wege der Zusammenarbeit sowie neue kulturelle Paradigmen modellieren.


Die Preisträger*innen des Jahres 2023

Die Preisträger*innen teilen sich eine Summe von 15.000 Pfund, das vom Permaculture Magazine zur Verfügung gestellt wird.

Preisträger

Sol Haven

Die Community Interest Company Sol Haven (eingetragen als SOL LAUG HAVENS C.I.C.) wurde im Januar 2018 in UK gegründet und basiert auf der gemeinsamen Leidenschaft der Gründer für nachhaltige Landwirtschaft und ihren persönlichen Erfahrungen mit Obdachlosigkeit.

Ihre Vision ist es, ein Konzept für nachhaltige Permakultur-Pflegezentren in ganz UK zu schaffen, die ein Schaufenster für ländliches Kunsthandwerk sind und gleichzeitig eine nachhaltige lokale Versorgung mit Lebensmitteln bieten.

Insgesamt zielt das Projekt darauf ab, ein praktisches Umfeld zu erforschen, zu entwickeln und zu schaffen, das dazu genutzt werden kann, eine bessere Gegenwart und eine bessere Zukunft zu gestalten. Sie bezieht Menschen ein, die heute sehr reale Bedürfnisse haben, und bietet eine echte Chance, Leben zu verändern und eine Gemeinschaft aufzubauen.

Sol Haven hat stillgelegte landwirtschaftliche Gebäude und Gärten renoviert. So entstand ein sozialer Treffpunkt für verschiedene Gruppen und Veranstaltungen, die zur Stärkung der lokalen Gemeinschaft beitragen.

Der 12-wöchige Kurs „Ploughing the mind“ (Den Geist durchpflügen) wurde sorgfältig konzipiert, um Menschen, die Probleme mit ihrer psychischen Gesundheit haben, dabei zu helfen, wieder Anschluss an die Gemeinschaft und an sich selbst zu finden und neue Freunde zu gewinnen.

Die Aktivitäten im Rahmen des Kurses umfassen:

  • Natur- und Gartentherapie
  • Aufklärung über psychische Gesundheit
  • Bewegungsmeditation
  • Trommeln
  • Kochen.

Eine Mischung aus verschiedenen Aktivitäten bietet Unterstützung, Ausdrucksmöglichkeiten und die Chance, neue Fähigkeiten zu erlernen.

Nach Abschluss des Programms möchte Sol Haven die Menschen im Rahmen eines umfassenderen Programms unterstützen, das ihnen weiterhin hilft, Hürden zu überwinden, die sie daran hindern, sich sozial zu engagieren und Arbeit zu finden.

  • 2023
  • Permaculture Magazine Award

Projektinformationen

Preisträger

Tejiendo Futuros NGO

Tejiendo Futuros ONG (Weaving Futuros NGO) wurde 2018 in der Gemeinde Panajachel, Guatemala, gegründet.

Sie entstand als Reaktion auf die dringenden Bedürfnisse der örtlichen Gemeinschaft. Diese Herausforderungen sind auf strukturelle Gewalt zurückzuführen, sowie auf die Tatsache, dass der Staat seine Bürger im Stich gelassen hat.

Das Ganze führte zu einem mangelnden Zugang zu Gesundheitsversorgung, Bildung, angemessenem Wohnraum, Arbeit und sozialer Eingliederung. Panajachel ist ein Touristenziel, was für einen Großteil der Bevölkerung prekäre Arbeitsbedingungen mit sich bringt.

Tejiendo Futuros versucht, diese Herausforderungen zu bewältigen und den lokalen Bedürfnissen gerecht zu werden, indem es ein umfassendes Arbeitsmodell entwickelt, das sich auf vier Schwerpunktthemen konzentriert: ganzheitliche Bildung, Agrarökologie, psychosoziale Betreuung und Gesundheit.

Seine aktuellen Arbeiten:

  • Zusammenarbeit mit über 50 Familien
  • Bildungsangebote für fast 100 Kinder
  • Bereitstellung umfangreicher Gesundheitsdienstleistungen
  • Entwicklung von agrarökologischen Produktionszentren.

Seine ganzheitliche Schule „The Tree of Childhood“ bietet Kindern und Jugendlichen kostenlose Bildung und Verpflegung, um optimale Lernbedingungen zu schaffen.

Mütter und Väter erhalten psychosoziale Betreuung im Rahmen des Programms „Gestärkte Familien“. Sie arbeiten daran, negative Verhaltensmuster durch Workshops über Selbstwertgefühl, neue Männlichkeit, verantwortungsvolle Mutterschaft/Vaterschaft und Selbstfürsorge zu beseitigen.

Im Rahmen des Programms „Gesunder Geist, gesunder Körper“ wird der körperliche und geistige Zustand der Mitglieder ständig überwacht, und es wird eine qualitativ hochwertige Pflege angeboten, um ihre Gesundheit zu gewährleisten.

Das agrarökologische Programm „KaUlew“ (Unser Land in Cakchikel) fördert eine gesunde Lebensweise, verantwortungsvollen Konsum, Umweltbewusstsein, Unternehmertum und die Bewahrung althergebrachter Produktionsverfahren.

  • 2023
  • Permaculture Magazine Award

Projektinformationen

Preisträger

Unidos Social Innovation Centre

Das Unidos Social Innovation Centre wurde 2018 von einer Gruppe von Personen mit Fluchterfahrung gegründet, die in der Siedlung Nakivale für Geflüchtete in Uganda leben.

Diese Siedlung beherbergt rund 120.000 Personen mit Fluchterfahrung aus Nachbarländern und -kulturen wie Kongo, Burundi, Somalia, Äthiopien und Südsudan. Von diesen 120.000 Menschen sind etwa 14.200 Farmer*innen.

Das Unidos Social Innovation Centre hat sich zusammengeschlossen, um nach der drastischen Kürzung der Lebensmittelrationen für Personen mit Fluchterfahrung in Uganda einen Beitrag zur Schaffung von Lebensunterhaltsmöglichkeiten und zur Ernährungssicherheit in der Gemeinde zu leisten.

Die Organisation versucht, Lösungen für einige der großen Herausforderungen zu finden, mit denen die Menschen konfrontiert sind: Armut, Klimawandel, Krieg und politische Unterdrückung durch die Heimatländer. Alle Aktivitäten beruhen auf integrativer Bildung und der Stärkung der Handlungskompetenz durch unternehmerische Fähigkeiten.

Das Zentrum bietet verschiedene Kurse an, wie z. B.:

  • Ökologische Bewirtschaftungsmethoden
  • Englisch
  • Unternehmen und Führung
  • Empowerment von Frauen

Die Organisation arbeitet an verschiedenen externen Standorten an Permakultur-Projekten. 2021 hat sie ein eigenes Bildungszentrum gebaut.

Seitdem hat sie fast 700 Menschen aus Somalia, Kongo und Burundi dabei unterstützt, sich erfolgreich als Farmer*innen im ökologischen Landbau zu qualifizieren.

Nun möchte die Organisation den Boden regenerieren, indem sie Tausende von Menschen aufklärt und ihnen zeigt, wie Wurmkompostierung betrieben werden kann, und welchen Nutzen sie für den Anbau von Nahrungsmitteln hat, zumal sie eine Lösung für den unfruchtbaren Boden im Lager Nakivale darstellt. Sie sieht außerdem das Potenzial von kommerziellen Wurmkompostierungssystemen und hat ein solches System in der Nähe ihres Bildungszentrums in Nakivale errichtet.

  • 2023
  • Permaculture Magazine Award

Projektinformationen


Auf der Shortlist

Bioregional Weaving Lab Waterford

Bioregional Weaving Lab Waterford takes a place-based approach to connecting fragmented initiatives into a collective impact approach for systemic change.

In doing this, it seeks to support long term transformation and regeneration. It aims to build a resilient food system that supports thriving landscapes, seascapes and communities. They do this by:

  • Using networks and desktop research to reach out to stakeholders across the local food system. These range from farmers and teachers to decision makers in the Waterford region of Ireland. They meet them in their place, building trust, and also host multistakeholder workshops.
  • Identifying the natural boundaries of the local bioregion by looking at maps of soil, watersheds and biotypes, walking the land and talking with the people.
  • Sensing the need for systems change and applying tools and methodology for designing a strategy to push for holistic (natural, social, financial and inspirational) regeneration in rural and urban settings within the bioregion.

The bioregional weaving lab in Ireland started in 2019 and is hosted at the Grow It Yourself (GIY) office at GROW HQ cafe and regenerative garden in Waterford. GIY is a social enterprise that was established in 2008 to increase food empathy through school, community, business and media programmes. They have supported around 1 million participants to grow at least part of their own food.

The Irish bioregional weaving lab is part of an emerging European collective coordinated by Commonland, Ashoka and The Presencing Institute.

  • 2023
  • Permaculture Magazine Award
Photo: Bioregional Weaving Lab Waterford

Projektinformationen

Groundswell International

Groundswell International was founded in 2009 by representatives all over the world, who came together to create a partnership that draws on decades of collaboration and experience of developing effective approaches for strengthening community-led social change in Africa, the Americas and Asia.

As stated in Groundswell’s book ‘Fertile Ground: Scaling AE [Agroecology] from the Ground Up’, “There are about 2.5 billion people in the world, on 500 million farms, involved with smallholder family agriculture and food production. Their creative capacity to farm productively and sustainable with nature, instead of against it, is perhaps the most powerful force that can be unleashed to overcome the interlinking challenges of hunger, poverty, climate change, and environmental degradation.”

Groundswell joined forces around the mission of strengthening communities to build healthy farming and food systems from the ground up, while contributing to the growing global agroecology and food sovereignty movement.

It strengthens the capacity and effectiveness of local partner organisations, which in turn empower communities, farmers, and indigenous organisations to lead social change. It does this via various means, including:

  • Collaborative design processes for programmes
  • Facilitation of reciprocal learning between partners and allies
  • Support for technical and methodological training

In 2021 Groundswell provided $1,541,000 to partner organisations, contributing to a total of over $13,727,000 distributed to partner programs since 2009.

Its work not only regenerates land impacted by climate change, but also creates economic benefits for those involved, improves health and nutrition, and reduces incentives for migration with a focus on gender equity.

  • 2023
  • Permaculture Magazine Award
Photo: Groundswell International

Projektinformationen

Habiba Community

Habiba Community is a bottom-up initiative based on the shores of Sinai, Egypt. It joined the Ecosystem Restoration Camps (ERC) movement in 2019 and is now one of many organisations in this movement encouraging regenerative sustainable development models in South Sinai.

Ultimately Habiba seeks to make the Sinai desert green again. Habiba’s efforts to restore the South Sinai region are matched with international efforts underway to restore the entire Peninsula, which thousands of years ago used to be a forest-covered region rich in life and biodiversity. This development model has changed the mindset, by building inclusion, creating a network of 75 farms, 48 of which are Bedouin owned, that have fair access to the local market, and providing equal opportunities for all to guarantee well-being.

Habiba combines education and work in permaculture and restoration of the natural system with the goal of cooperating with the local Bedouin community. Embracing the ERC goal of providing educational programs in environmental restoration and regenerative practices for personal health and well-being.

Habiba helped local communities to:

  • Introduce regenerative agricultural techniques
  • Stop erosion
  • Avoid further desertification
  • Rebuild local livelihoods, based on healthy ecosystems

Habiba’s key asset is a regenerative and organic farm in the desert. This adapts cutting-edge methods in sustainable agri-tech and experimentation. This farm is changing the way food is produced, and is an international knowledge hub where community collaboration takes place.

Habiba is now working towards building a climate change resilient community in the coastal town of Nuweiba.

  • 2023
  • Permaculture Magazine Award
Photo: Habiba Community

Projektinformationen

Komunidad Kolinda

Founded in 2018, Komunidad Kolinda is an intentional eco-community. It has 11 international permanent inhabitants aiming to live autonomously and harmoniously on 6.5 hectares of forested shared land in the temperate high-altitude Sierra Sur mountains of Oaxaca, Mexico.

The community practises regenerative agriculture and reforestation techniques, bioconstruction, traditional medicine, art, education and spirituality in close alignment with the local Zapotec indigenous population.

The project aspires to the highest possible level of self-reliance in terms of food, water, health, energy and building materials. In order to protect the sense of community, Kolinda follows a simple internal rule – no one is entitled to buy or sell houses without the approval of all and new members enter the community through consensus of the current members. The land is communally managed.

The community started with a land of mostly mixed forest. Its focus has been on building infrastructure, such as a road, water system, communal house and three private houses in order to host permanent and temporary members, visitors, volunteers and events.

It has built hundreds of metres of terraces to grow a wide variety of vegetables, and has dozens of fruit trees in the ground, as part of a food forest design. Everything has been achieved without external funding.

The community will in time turn its focus outwards to projects that will benefit the surrounding communities, such as the House of Healing and a medicinal garden and the Bosque de Mil Anos reforestation projects.

  • 2023
  • Permaculture Magazine Award
Photo: Komunidad Kolinda

Projektinformationen

NILE Journeys

NILE Journeys was established in 2016 as a platform for Nile communities. Its work unfolds through community hubs across Nile Basin countries. There are currently eight hubs, and they are expanding.

Communities across the Nile Basin suffer inequalities and limitations in their natural, human, or technological well-being, which renders them vulnerable to climate change and its effects. The word NILE refers not only to the Nile’s energetic field of the majestic river but also serves as an acronym for what the platform aims to do “Nurturing Impulses for Living Ecosystems”.

The NILE Journeys vision is to nurture life-affirming actions in the Nile bio-region through participatory and experiential learning spaces rooted in indigenous knowledge and regenerative practices.

NILE Journeys has so far:

  • Engaged more than 97,000 people
  • Provided direct support to eight Community Hubs
  • Established three dialogue spaces
  • Established three agroecology demonstration sites
  • Set up a library
  • Co-established a restaurant in a rural co-working space
  • Co-established a moringa oil press unit
  • Sponsored the education of 83 children
  • Sustainably regenerated 168 hectares
  • Trained 35 community leaders on dialogue facilitation

The NILE journeys’ goal for 2026 is to become a model of trans-local collaboration in the Nile basin with regenerative practices that can be replicated in other fields and other parts of the basin.

  • 2023
  • Permaculture Magazine Award
Photo: NILE Journeys

Projektinformationen

The Lions’ Gate Garden at Edinburgh Napier University

The Lions’ Gate Garden is an urban permaculture project based at Edinburgh Napier University’s Merchiston campus. It is supported by the School of Computing, Engineering & the Built Environment, the School of Arts & Creative Industries, and Properties & Facilities.

The project’s design and development are guided by 12 permaculture principles and three core ethics: people care, planet care and fair share. In following these, the garden seeks to provide a safe, welcoming, and inspirational space for students, staff, local and international communities. It seeks to empower individuals by envisioning and ‘doing’ sustainable and regenerative activities; growing sustainable futures through exploration and immersion in nature whilst investigating the impact of digital media on the environment.

With the support of many, The Lions’ Gate Garden now includes:

  • Outdoor classroom
  • Green-roof
  • Ponds
  • Storytelling throne
  • Staging
  • Living-geodesic-dome
  • Relaxation space
  • Water-harvesting systems
  • Pathways
  • Power and plumbing
  • A sustainability library
  • And many other creative interventions by and for students, staff, and the public.

The project has led to further regeneration of spaces on campus including a rooftop allotment and rewilding space. It has also influenced conversations at university and societal levels.

Lions’ Gate has published papers on the project, been awarded 4* in a 2021 Research Excellence Framework Impact Case Study on ‘Blended Spaces Design,’ and contributed to publications and events concerned with planetary and human health. In September 2022, Lions’ Gate organised another amazing Open Day event as part of Climate Fringe, Great Big Green Week and Permaculture Association’s My Green Community.

  • 2023
  • Permaculture Magazine Award
Photo: The Lions’ Gate Garden at Edinburgh Napier University

Projektinformationen

The Rewild Project CIC

The Rewild Project CIC (TRF) has existed as not-for-profit in the Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire, UK since January 2016.

With no nature connection organisations in the area and having the highest rate of mental health issues in the county, TRP aims to build the resilience of all who get involved through their Radical Regen Rewilding approach.

Its achievements so far include:

  • Since June 2021, TRP have offered free open access Craft and Land skills, 4 days a week. Including free transport free cooked meal and drinks.
  • Delivering hundreds of affordable and accessible workshops (over 200 days since 2016)
  • Setting up a community craft centre in the centre of Forest of Dean.
  • Setting up three community orchards, one of which is award winning.
  • Coppicing and restoring acres of neglected woodland and part-planting a community coppice.
  • Creating a sensory garden for a home for people with disabilities
  • Training many local people in chainsaw and regenerative woodland practices
  • Setting up the ‘Springs and Wells project’, which organised community clean and refurbished 2 local Wells.

TRP is close to becoming an Open College Network Learning Centre to deliver Craft and Land Skills qualification for youth who are experiencing or at risk of exclusion or home educated.

It has so far achieved all of this without secure land tenureship, having run most projects on land under license or from the roadside as travellers. This is increasingly more challenging with the Trespass Bill. A vision to secure land for the people through setting up SEED (Social Environmental Education Diverse), Community Land Trust based on coop principles.

  • 2023
  • Permaculture Magazine Award
Photo: The Rewild Project CIC

Projektinformationen

theOtherDada

theOtherDada (tOD) was founded in 2010 as a regenerative consultancy & architecture practice with a special focus on Biomimicry in Beirut, Lebanon.

Its founder, Adib Dada, spent seven years advocating for the renaturalization of Beirut’s river which today is nothing but a toxic sewage canal. Frustrated by the lack of progress and carelessness of local authorities, tOD decided three years ago that what was needed was tangible action on the ground. The company evolved beyond architecture to reclaim cities as habitat for all life to thrive.

The project has survived through a revolution, pandemic, destruction of the organisation’s office during the Beirut explosion, near-fatal injury of its founder, and resignation of the entire previous team due to external societal pressures to emigrate.

tOD is a symbol of how working with and for nature enables adaptation, resilience and hope in the most challenging times, especially as it just became Lebanon’s first BCorp, proving that whatever the context, businesses can and should be a force for good.

The pilot project ‘Beirut’s RiverLESS Forest’ empowered people to reclaim an urban landfill on “river” banks. This received overwhelming support from Beirut’s citizens and beyond.

Local community members volunteering have said: “Planting a tree here feels like an act of revolution itself.” It connects people back to themselves, their land, each other – and life itself.

theOtherDada is now maintaining 11 forests, 10 of which are reclaiming degraded land in public spaces (traffic islands, school playgrounds, public parks), plus one private one. This amounts to 3 267sqm, 28 different native species and over 13 000 trees and shrubs.

  • 2023
  • Permaculture Magazine Award
Photo: theOtherDada

Projektinformationen