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Building a green desert community, is it possible?

By | April 26, 2011, 9:39 AM PDT

The sprawling desert community above is what the Mesa del Sol development is modeling against.

Is it possible to build a green community in the desert?

The developers of the Mesa del Sol community in New Mexico don’t just see a green mirage when they look out over the unfinished community.

Mesa del Sol is about the size of Manhattan and is planned based on New Urbanist principles of walkability, density, and mixed-used development by Peter Calthorpe (who spoke with Smartplanet last week about how this sort of urban development is on the “cutting edge of environmentalism”). The community broke ground last month on its first residential development, which will be completed in the next six months. Located just outside of Albuquerque, the community will eventually house 100,000 people, but it’s far from sprawl.

From High Country News:

Like other desert boomtowns, Albuquerque’s loosely planned sprawl is on a collision course with its finite water supply. Mesa del Sol will have an extremely efficient water system, and its dense, mixed-use design could reduce the need for more development on the city’s west side, where suburbs have consumed huge tracts of once-wild desert. Still, “sustainable” development in the arid Southwest sounds quixotic at best, an oxymoron at worst.

In this uncertain economy, nowhere else in the West is a New Urbanist project of this scale moving forward. And yet, this March, Forest City broke ground on Mesa del Sol’s first neighborhood. The developer’s persistence is thanks in large part to its unusually close alliance with local government.

Sustainable development in the desert might seem like an oxymoron, but it’s certainly a nice contrast to the sprawl that has plagued Southwestern cities. And it’s a good sign that the community’s first tenant was a solar panel manufacturing company.

Check out the development and decide for yourself.

Photo: Daquella manera/Flickr

[Via Planetizen]

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Tyler Falk

About Tyler Falk

Tyler Falk is a contributing editor for SmartPlanet.

Tyler Falk

Tyler Falk

Contributing Editor, Cities

Tyler Falk is a Communications Fellow with Smart Growth America. Previously, he was an editorial assistant for Grist. He holds a degree from Goshen College. He is based in Washington, D.C.

Follow him on Twitter.

Tyler Falk

Tyler Falk

Tyler does not have financial holdings that would influence how or what he covers.

He writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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RE: Building a green desert community, is it possible?
By integrating carefully designed permaculture gardening into the community, they can create an oasis in the dessert that does not rely on ground water. This has already been done several times on the very small scale (i.e. single residences or small groups of homes.) However, there is no reason to think it wouldn't work in a larger scale.
Posted by mheartwood
26th Apr 2011
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Unanswered question.
Is is sustainable with only the rain fall within its footprint?
Posted by Hates Idiots
27th Apr 2011
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Cities need to learn
Cities need to learn how to adapt their current budgets to meet their needs (whether that involve cuts or innovation) rather than just throwing more money into the mix. That goes for states, too.
As for "preserving the 'commonwealth,'" what is good for cities is not necessarily good for everyone else, and what is good for everyone may not be beneficial for anyone. Preserving the "commonwealth" should not come before the good of the people. Most of the time these are one and the same, but right now finances are of a great concern since we are spending ourselves into oblivion kral oyun kanal d oyun
Posted by onur26
Updated - 13th Oct
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