The New City lecture series

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To launch The Urgent Remarkable we’re holding a series of lectures at Cambridge University Department of Architecture, under the heading The New City.

The lectures will examine how our cities can be re-made in ways that will both inspire and enable all to live well – safely, healthily, prosperously, with pleasure and freedom – and within tightly bounded environmental limits.

All lectures are open to the public and will start at 4pm in Lecture Theatre One at the Department of Architecture, 1-5 Scroope Terrace, Cambridge, CB2 1PX. No registration is necessary. Full details can be found here (pdf).

4th February

  • Way beyond Smart: the case for Remarkable Cities (Jonathan Smales, Executive Chairman, Beyond Green)
  • How shall we live? (Joanna Yarrow, Founding Director, Beyond Green)

11th February

  • A new movement? (Neil Murphy, Director Policy, Planning & Economics & Bruce McVean, Integrated Design Manger, Beyond Green)

18th February

  • Urban form for remarkable cities (Paul Murrain, urban designer and landscape architect)

25th February

  • Remarkable construction (Chris Whitehead, International Head of Sustainability, Balfour Beatty)

4th March

 


Introducing ‘The Urgent Remarkable’

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This post is written by Jonathan Smales, Executive Chairman of Beyond Green.

We’re all sustainable now aren’t we? Perhaps not, but we all know about sustainability. How could we not? Sustainability and its offspring – resilience, durability, ‘zero carbon’, ‘green’, ‘eco’ everything – are ubiquitous. We have sustainable Olympics, codes for sustainable homes and buildings, sustainable schools, sustainable procurement (when we just keep on procuring?!), sustainable energy, sustainable cars, sustainable economies and industries, whole cities dedicated to the concept; we even have sustainable summitry.  We’re awash with it.

Has this overfamiliarity with the term bred laziness? Are we beguiled into thinking that just because we use the word so often we’ve dropped the bad habits of an unsustainable world?

I’ve certainly done my own share of sustainability punditry… With the best of intentions I was MD of Greenpeace UK, founded the Earth Centre, commissioned several significant green buildings and advised the Mayor of Hanover on the 2000 World EXPO. With a desire to up the ante on applied sustainability I co-founded Beyond Green in 2001. We’ve written sustainable development strategies for the Housing Corporation and CABE, founded the government’s programme on the public understanding of climate change, advised the City of Manchester on its climate change action plan, been a lead adviser on several major city and urban extensions & had a sustainability hand in the three largest real estate and regeneration projects in London.

When Beyond Green hit its 10th anniversary I began asking myself what lessons could be learned from these practical and applied projects. The conclusion was that the fundamental problem is in city strategy, planning, design, real estate, investment, infrastructure and design we’re still working in a system based on false assumptions. We’re collectively still not facing up to the magnitude or speed of change that’s needed. There’s a fundamental dissonance between what’s being done in the name of sustainability and the nature and scale of the challenges we should be addressing – as well as the opportunities that potentially lie in taking bold action.

In his seminal book Good Strategy/Bad Strategy Richard Rumelt argues that good strategy is “not just deciding what to do, but (is properly concerned with) the more fundamental problem of comprehending the situation”. Good strategies have a diagnosis, a guiding policy and coherent action. 

Sadly it seems that for ‘sustainability’ in the hands of most there’s no accurate or cogent diagnosis of the situation we’re in. Without this how can we formulate appropriate guiding policy or coherent actions? Little of what we do is integrated and fit for purpose.

What does ‘zero carbon’ really mean? In relation to what? Why is it important? When is a building or a transport strategy or a neighbourhood sufficiently sustainable given global megatrends such as rapid population growth, the Westernisation of consumption habits and lifestyles or escalating climate change? How many car journeys (electric or otherwise) or plane journeys can a world of 9 billion support? Can everyone eat a high meat-protein diet and use water as recklessly as we do in Britain? In Thomas L. Friedman’s words the world really is suddenly, ‘hot, flat and crowded’.  We urgently need to live differently – within environmental limits.

In Beyond Green most of our work is in one way or another connected with cities. Our strapline is, How shall we live?’ and we’re primarily concerned with how cities (now our principal human habitat) can be remade in ways that will inspire and enable all to live well that is, safely, healthily, actively, with pleasure, civility, tolerance and freedom – all within tightly bounded environmental limits.

The New City: What city infrastructure does this? Which ways of getting around, what type of real estate, which designs, what architecture, streets and other public realm could make this way of life possible? If 2050 is a tipping point how can we finance the rapid transformation of all world cities in the next crucial 37 years? Which economic models and investment strategies will work best? How can we make the necessary changes affordable and which versions of whole-life economics will do the job? How should we communicate with and engage people in these changes? What brand values should we espouse?  Which political policies and programmes should we create or support? And where do we look for inspiration in this cacophonous world?

Could there be any upside to getting this right? And what if there were a growing body of evidence that the cities that are already making these changes were becoming safer, more liveable, easier to move around in, that they were attracting disproportionate amounts of human talent, were more successful economically, were cleaner and more equitable? Wouldn’t that be remarkable?

With all this in mind at Beyond Green we’re working on a new world view regarding how we might live well (and that means sustainably) in the future and how we might transform cities to enable us to do so. We’re calling it the urgent remarkable. Urgent because of the unremitting global challenges we face and the need for an accurate and cogent diagnosis. Remarkable because global society must move remarkably quickly and boldly to address the challenges and seize the opportunities; and as we make the breakthrough changes to city fabric and city living we (hope) we’ll discover how remarkably well it all works.

The urgent remarkable world-view is being launched via a series of lectures at Cambridge University School of Architecture in February and March 2013 under the heading, The New City.

This will be followed by an international Summer School at Pembroke College in 2014 aimed at leaders from different sectors and disciplines from cities around the world.


Motivating the mainstream – Joanna Yarrow to speak at Green Monday, 3rd December

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Joanna Yarrow will be taking part in a panel discussion on ‘motivating the mainstream’ at the next Green Monday event, which is taking place in London on 3rd December. Green Monday’s are evening events that explore issues around innovation and sustainability. You can apply to attend here.

Event overview:

Do you believe the mainstream holds the key to a sustainable future? Is it only through engaging and motivating them en-masse we create the commercial impetus to deliver new business-models?

Or, will it be through visionary leadership and new ways of thinking that we deliver change? After all, the internet was created by the vision of a few, and then adopted by the mainstream because it offered a better world.

For this special end-of-year debate, we explore four very different schools-of-thought.

Steven Kotler (via Video-link from the US) – Steven and his partner, Peter Diamandis, caused a storm when they published “Abundance” earlier this year, arguing we have the ingenuity to overcome climate change and population growth.

Joanna Yarrow – Consumers need to experience a sustainable world for them to want it. An expert in making green living attractive, Joanna will share learnings from her BBC3′s Outrageous Wasters series, the Ariel 30 campaign, and her work with Unilever.

John Elkington – From 0 to 100: The Power of Stretch Thinking. One of the gurus of sustainability will explore what can be achieved with stretch targets, and how breakthroughs come from a relatively small group in society rather than the mainstream.

Dr. Michael Braungart – The co-creator of Cradle to Cradle thinking, Michael will explain why closed loop thinking is redefining business models, and helping companies to find advantage from thinking differently. Responding will be two people who have an unparalleled understanding of current mainstream opinion.

David Aaronovitch – Author, Tweeter and Columnist for The Times

Greg Nugent – Brand, Marketing & Culture Director for the London 2012 Olympics


Press release: NS&OC Outline Planning Application submitted today

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Following presentation of proposals at public exhibitions on 6th and 7th October, Beyond Green have today submitted an Outline Planning Application for North Sprowston and Old Catton (NS&OC).

Proposals include:

  • up to 3,520 homes of mixed size, tenure and type including up to 33% ‘affordable’ homes;
  • up to 16,800m² of business and employment space including adaptable office buildings, incubators, workshops and studios for small businesses and start-ups and an enterprise ‘hub’ supporting micro-companies and homeworkers – creating 1,000 local jobs by the time the development is completed;
  • up to 8,800m² of retail and services development providing for shops, banks, cafés, restaurants, pubs and other essential local services to meet local people’s daily needs in a traditional high street setting;
  • sites for two new primary schools and up to 2,000m² of community space including two community halls, a health centre and library;
  • up to 1,000m² for up to two small hotels or guesthouses;
  • easy access to public transport and streets designed to make walking and cycling the most convenient modes of transport;
  • over 80 hectares of green space including a major new public park at Beeston Park, three recreation grounds, allotments and community gardens, with 40% of the site, not including private gardens, becoming accessible green space; and
  • a very low-carbon decentralised energy network, plus infrastructure to manage water resources sustainably.

Jonathan Smales, Executive Chairman of the Beyond Green Group, said “we’re delighted to be submitting this outline planning application for a superb new extension to Sprowton and Old Catton. If the proposals in this application are granted consent, we want to work with people in Broadland to deliver a place that helps us to achieve the highest quality of life with the lowest environmental footprint.

“Future residents will enjoy a range of housing types and tenures that are affordable to local people; a stunning park consisting of the restored historic landscape of Beeston Park (currently inaccessible, privately-farmed arable fields) with Red Hall Farm; two new primary schools and community spaces; and a place where it will be easiest as well as most pleasant to move around for everyday journeys on foot and by bicycle.

“We have been greatly encouraged by the way in which people in Broadland have been prepared to commit their expertise, local knowledge and time to working with us to explore opportunities for NS&OC. We had a great turnout at the exhibitions last week, with over 230 members of the public and over 70 stakeholders attending the events. This input will continue to be invaluable should this project proceed; now that the application has been submitted we will renew our efforts to engage and involve, looking for people to input into proposals and for those who want to become actively involved in the delivery of this development.”

Beyond Green’s application will be considered by Broadland District Council in the context of the Joint Core Strategy (JCS) for Broadland, Norwich and South Norfolk, adopted in March 2011, which provides for the development of 33,000 homes within the ‘Norwich Policy Area’ between 2008 and 2026.

The application site is within the Broadland ‘Growth Triangle’ proposed for at least 7,000 dwellings by 2026 rising to at least 10,000 after 2026. In February 2012 following a legal challenge the High Court remitted policies relating to the Growth Triangle for further consultation and sustainability appraisal, and revised draft policies are currently undergoing public consultation.  Reflecting the importance of the plan-making process, Beyond Green has requested that Broadland District Council does not determine the planning application until the outcome of this further work is clear and the JCS is re-adopted, probably in spring 2013.

The full NS&OC Outline Planning Application including technical appendices can be viewed on the Beyond Green website. Once the application has been validated by Broadland District Council, they will conduct a formal consultation inviting comments on the proposals, which will be available on their website (www.broadland.gov.uk) and to view in person at the Broadland District Council offices and at Sprowston Diamond Centre. Beyond Green hope that as many people as possible will provide their comments; we welcome all comments, positive and negative, and are keen to see as many viewpoints as possible represented in the response.

Further details can be found in the Notes to Editors accompanying this press release. If you would like to receive updates on NS&OC, please email nsoc@beyondgreen.co.uk asking to be added to our mailing list.


Invitation to view NS&OC Outline Planning Application

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Beyond Green are pleased to announce that we will soon be submitting an Outline Planning Application for our project in North Sprowston and Old Catton (‘NS&OC’).

We’ve spent over two years developing proposals and plans with local residents and stakeholders. We’ve sought to design a place which not only delivers much needed new housing, jobs and social infrastructure but in which people will be able to enjoy a superb lifestyle with wonderful green spaces and easy access to good schools, shops, and the attractions of the city and the Norfolk countryside. All coupled with a very low environmental footprint.

Our proposals for NS&OC include:

  • up to 3,520 new homes of different sizes and types, including up to one third ‘affordable’ homes;
  • new spaces for business enabling over 1,000 jobs to be created on-site;
  • two new primary schools, a health centre, library and community halls;
  • shops and services to meet local people’s daily needs in a traditional high street setting;
  • over 80 hectares of green space including a major new public park at Beeston Park, three recreation grounds, allotments and community gardens;
  • easy access to public transport and streets designed to make walking and cycling the most convenient modes of transport;
  • a very-low-carbon decentralised energy network, plus infrastructure to manage water resources sustainably.

On Saturday 6th and Sunday 7th October we’re holding a weekend of public exhibitions at Sprowston Diamond Centre (map here) to view the Outline Planning Application for NS&OC and discuss proposals with the Beyond Green team. If you live or work nearby we do hope you’ll be able to join us. For more details please see our public invitation (PDF).

Once submitted the full Outline Planning Application will be available on the website – watch this space for details.


TDAG releases new guide on Trees in the Townscape

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The Trees and Design Action Group (TDAG) today released a new guide, Trees in the Townscape. The guide – which Beyond Green has helped to shape – aims to raise awareness of the benefits of trees in the urban environment, and to equip decision makers, developers and other green infrastructure professionals with the know-how to maximise these benefits through a series of key principles and actions.

Making the most of existing trees and enhancing their network within towns and cities through new planting is a no-brainer for Beyond Green, with the multiple benefits for biodiversity, climate change adaptation, as play spaces and even as a means of producing food more locally (have a look at the London Orchard Project and Sheffield’s Abundance Project for some great examples of the latter). Not to mention of course, the health, economic and aesthetic value that trees bring to a place.

Consequently trees are always a key component of green infrastructure networks in Beyond Green projects, incorporated into green spaces of all sizes and characters – from gardens and green roofs, to green streets, squares and parks – helping to form a continuous network of abundant greenery enabling people to be active, to enjoy recreation, to grow their own food and to connect with the natural environment.

As such, and with over 80% of the UK’s population living in urban environments, TDAG’s publication is a timely reminder and aid for all concerned to make space for trees in our towns and cities and ensure they last a lifetime.

For more information, see the TDAG Trees in the Townscape press release; the full Trees in the Townscape report is also available on their website.


“At the end of the day who do you trust?” Says Smales

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Beyond Green CEO and former director of Greenpeace UK was recently interviewed for a feature in The Times on the charity.

Read on to see the whole story, courtesy of The Times, 13 May 2011

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Established 40 years ago, Greenpeace is now the world’s most powerful NGO. But some now question its anti-nuclear goal

As symbols of the nuclear age go, the imposing steel molecule of Brussels’ Atomium is pretty potent. Built for the 1958 World Fair, it’s a popular tourist attraction but today it has unexpected visitors.

Standing beneath the futuristic monument, David Verbist, an action co-ordinator for Greenpeace, directs a group of protesters perched 100m above on the highest of its metal spheres, glinting in the sunshine. As they pull down the Belgian tricolour and replace it with a flag bearing a No Nukes symbol, three police cars and two vans pull into the forecourt. “Good! Here comes the chief of police,” says Michel Peremans, the campaign director for Greenpeace Belgium.

The country gets around 60 per cent of its energy from its two nuclear plants, both of which are past their intended lifespan. In 2005, Verbist was one of a group who scaled the reactor in Tihange and painted a giant crack on its stack. A 36-year-old architect with a beard and a ponytail, he has overseen more than 50 similar actions since he joined Greenpeace. “I’m not doing this for the kicks, I’m doing this because I’m angry,” he says. “When I turned 30 I was frustrated about the way some things were. I wanted change and Greenpeace don’t just sit around complaining, they do something.”

This is the 40th year that Greenpeace has been engaging in dramatic publicity stunts, or “media mindbombs”, as founder Robert Hunter coined them — from locating illegal logging in the Amazon from the air to occupying oil rigs en route to the Arctic. Today, it is the largest environmental organisation in the world, with power and determination to take on the biggest governments and corporations. It employs 2,000 salaried staff, operating in more than 40 countries on behalf of 2.89 million supporters worldwide, each financed via donations ( money is not accepted from governments or companies). The UK office is one of the top five contributors to global fundraising — which totalled €195 million in 2009. Its fixed assets are put at €38 million, including property and marine vessels, such as its flagship Rainbow Warrior.

The successor to the original Rainbow Warrior, which was blown up by the French intelligence service while in harbour in New Zealand in 1985, the schooner is currently monitoring radiation levels near Fukushima, although the Japanese Government refused it permission to operate within its territorial waters.

With the shockwaves from the Japanese nuclear crisis still felt across the globe, Greenpeace has responded with protest actions. In France last week, 55 activists blockaded the site of a new pressurised reactor being built in Flamanville.

Despite the adverse publicity of Fukushima — yesterday, Rainbow Warrior’s crew recorded high radiation levels in seaweed samples up to 40 miles out to sea — many argue that if global warming is to be contained, nuclear energy is the only credible option.

With those such as Stephen Tindale, a former Greenpeace executive director, speaking up for atomic power, the green lobby seems to be caught between a rock and a hot place but Greenpeace remains dogmatic in its pursuit of a renewable energy solution.

“Our DNA is nuclear, that’s where our founding fathers began and it’s always been a core issue,” says John Sauven, the current UK executive director, “but climate change is now deeply tied in with it. It’s not enough to oppose nuclear power stations, you have to have a solution. We have to be seen to win the renewable argument.”

This is Greenpeace’s greatest challenge as it embarks on its fifth decade but it’s far from the only one. From controlling tuna fishing in Libya to taking on businesses such as Facebook and Apple for using “dirty data” in the form of coal energy, it campaigns in every environmental field and lays claim to many victories: bringing about the moratorium on whaling by the International Whaling Commission in 1982, the banning of large-scale driftnets in 1989, the official cessation of dumping of radioactive and industrial waste at sea through the 1993 London Dumping Convention, and forcing Shell to cancel plans to dispose of the Brent Spar storage buoy in the Atlantic following a 1995 occupation and the publication of damaging data about its contents.

Its impact on corporations and governments, however, has made the group deeply unpopular, and not solely with those it baits. In 1991, one Forbes magazine article declared that “Greenpeace has turned itself into a vigilante group … acting as judge and jury”, while its stance on GM food and biofuels — underlined by a 1999 attack on a six-acre crop of GM maize at Walnut Tree Farm near Norwich — led one founding member, Patrick Moore, to brand the organisation as having evolved “into a band of scientific illiterates”. Others seized on Greenpeace’s admission that it had got its sums wrong over the Brent Spar to attack it as ideologically driven and irresponsible.

“These are hugely complex things and you’re bound to make the odd error,” admits Jonathan Smales, a former director of UK Greenpeace, “but our general drift has been spot on and has been supported by an evidence base — unlike the opposition, which is wishful thinking.”

In the mid-Eighties the popularity of Greenpeace exploded in reaction to key historical events. “Rainbow Warrior’s sinking was a massive thing for us,” recalls Smales. “We thought ‘F***! Look what can happen with this stuff we’re dealing with!’. Chernobyl was another huge shock to the system. We were flying in those days. The world had shifted on its axis and it felt as if we could do no wrong, as if we were unimpeachable.”

Smales restructured the UK branch, moving to new eco-refitted offices in North London on the site of a former animal testing laboratory in 1989. From a handful of volunteers, it has grown to 84 employees, plus volunteers and unpaid interns. Salaries are generous by NGO standards but not outlandish — a direct marketing fundraiser job is currently on offer at £32,700; the UK executive director earns £70,000.

Support in Britain swelled to around 350,000 by the Nineties, when the movement’s green crusader image attracted celebrities to its cause. In June 1992 U2 took part in one of Greenpeace’s biggest coups, landing on the beach at Sellafield with several drums of toxic waste. GlastonburyFestival remains a key contributor, as demonstrated by a photocopied cheque from Michael Eavis for £600,000 pinned to a wall in the Islington office.

Two years ago UK Greenpeace scored a significant legal victory from an action when six activists scaled the 200m chimney at Kingsnorth power station in a protest against plans to build the first new coal plant in this country in 20 years. In October 2009 the protesters were acquitted of criminal damage in a landmark ruling on the grounds of “lawful excuse”. The judgment said that their actions were justified to prevent greater damage from climate change. In the wake of that decision, E.on Energy announced it was scrapping proposals to build the first new coal plant there in 30 years.

While traditional protests such as Kingsnorth continue to make their mark, Greenpeace is increasingly taking to the internet. Last March it targeted the food manufacturer Nestlé for buying palm oil from a company it claimed was causing devastation to the Indonesian rainforest. A spoof viral ad featuring a man unwrapping a Kit Kat bar and chewing on an orang-utan finger was posted on YouTube. When Nestlé had it removed it triggered a digital media backlash as supporters started mirroring it across the net, prompting millions of viewings.

“It was a phenomenon and it almost singlehandedly brought Nestlé to the negotiating table,” claims media director Ben Stewart, also one of the Kingsnorth Six. “A photograph of a guy on an inflatable is a bit tired.”

Greenpeace’s reliance on dramatic media coups has more than its share of critics, even within the organisation. Early activist Paul Watson left to found Sea Shepherd because of his frustration with images of inflatable protests that he claimed were designed not to save whales but to raise funds. Others have suggested that Greenpeace is better at organising protest than offering alternatives, an accusation that frustrates John Sauven.

“I spend most of my time promoting solutions and co-operating on policy work,” he tells me, “but because of the media work we do people only assume we are involved in protest. It’s a misconception. Much of my time is spent sitting round the table with some of the biggest businesses in the world, coming up with answers at boardroom level. It’s the iceberg effect, most of what we do goes on out of sight.

“After the Nestlé action I went to meet the board in Geneva and together we ended up transforming their whole supply policy and announced a commitment to end deforestation.”

Nestlé’s response to the incident suggests the issue was less black and white. “The company had already been working on the issue of environmental threat to rainforests and peat fields in South-East Asia long before the direct involvement of Mr Sauven,” says a spokesman, adding: “We are happy to be in a positive dialogue with Greenpeace and to show to many Greenpeace supporters that we engage in an open and serious debate.”

The casually attired Sauven and Stewart are typical of the liberal, white, educated middle-class European activists who replaced the North American hippies in beards and sandals, but now Greenpeace’s powerbase is shifting towards the southern hemisphere.

Its current executive director, Kumi Naidoo, is a black South African and the movement is expanding rapidly in India, Brazil, and China, whose massive hunger for resources is a major source of pollution. Greenpeace established a base in Hong Kong in 1997 and now has an office in Beijing. The organisation brings as much pressure as it can but inevitably has to tread very carefully.

“It’s very difficult to operate here but it’s not impossible because compared with things like human rights the environment is less sensitive,” says Sze Pang Cheung, campaign director of Greenpeace East Asia. “There are red-line issues that are a definite no-no but the Government is aware that there is a problem and that makes it possible for us to be critical. There is real concern at the top about pollution. The most basic level is that people are not happy, farmers and the middle-class have protested at polluted rivers and toxic emissions. It’s a concern for the party on a social and political level.”

Greenpeace China’s actions are tepid compared with Kingsnorth or even the Atomium. Last year protesters received coverage in the Chinese press when they unfurled a No Coal banner outside a Beijing coal plant. “There is always risk,” Cheung says. “Calculation is a big part of planning these actions. We want to push the limits but we don’t want people jailed or the offices shut down, which would be counter-productive.”

Coal is the No1 issue in China. The country gets only 4 per cent of its power from nuclear energy — a planned reactor programme is on hold in the wake of Fukushima. A new Rainbow Warrior is due to launch at the end of the year at a cost of £6 million; Beijing is its likely first port of call.

Greenpeace may not make the waves it once did in the Seventies and Eighties but that is because it helped to spawn an entire generation of environmental pressure groups, NGOs and green initiatives such as Friends of the Earth and even the Green Party. Support has hovered at just over 2½ million globally since the turn of the century, considerably down on the early Nineties when it could count on more than four million.

In the UK numbers now stand at 130,000 — nearly a third of its peak. Yet the drop in numbers has done nothing to slow its financial expansion. Ten years ago Greenpeace International’s income stood at $157 million; now it’s close to $200 million. Pressure groups do not come much more rich or powerful, which may explain why, in 2010, New Zealand’s Charities Commission ruled that its “objectionable activities” disqualified it from registering as a charity there.

“At the end of the day who do you trust?” asks Smales, who is now CEO of the SPACE eco-planning group Beyond Green. “When governments make spurious green claims someone needs to pick them up. You need an organisation prepared to speak out and it’s hard to think of another one that has Greenpeace’s level of trust.”

“We’re not going to shut up,” agrees Michel Peremans in Brussels. “There’s a Belgian expression, een luis in de pels — we’re the louse in their fur.”

It’s a description that will satisfy both supporters and opponents. Forty years on, Greenpeace remains a pest that can’t be controlled


Beyond Green CEO at the London Business School

London Business School Real Estate Event

Jonathan Smales spoke as part of a panel on ‘sustainability’ at the recent LBS Real Estate Event (‘What next for world’s largest asset class?’).

The event was opened via a wide ranging survey of market conditions and opportunities by John Ritblat (of Delancey) followed by a superb, up-beat account of the work and achievements of the Olympic Park Legacy Company (OPLC) delivered by Baroness Margaret Ford. Beyond Green was sustainability strategist to the Legacy, helping to develop the vision, standards and policies to which it would later work. We have also worked for many years at the Olympic Park, running public consultation for the London 2012 Olympic and Paralympic Games and for the subsequent Legacy programme.

Following a couple of controversial reviews of earlier plans and proposals by Beyond Green, it was very pleasing to hear Margaret’s affirmation of the importance of integrating new ‘development’ with existing neighbourhoods, the need for a diversity of homes (especially family housing) and employment, and for places and schemes which borrow from the best of existing London.

The sustainability panel debate (speakers details can be found here) was eclectic and covered topics and ideas including the imperative of improving the intensity and therefore cost and carbon efficiency of commercial space, the relative ease of achieving low carbon buildings, and the question of what to do about much existing commercial stock –which, it was argued, might be better replaced with more efficient contemporary buildings than to try to retrofit (careful with those embodied carbon calculations!).

Jonathan reminded the conference that the UK target for carbon reductions was 80% from 1990 levels by 2050 and that, to-date, carbon emissions had reduced by only 4% since 1990. Meanwhile, if carbon embodied in imports were accounted for overall emissions for the UK have actually increased dramatically. Accordingly, while buildings are important in achieving a very low to no carbon economy, it is the total carbon footprint (i.e. including society) that matters most. Buildings do not use energy people do. We need new and retrofitted places – whole neighbourhoods – which would both inspire and enable mass changes in behaviour leading to very low footprints. Rather than fight against the ambition of this  there is plenty of evidence to suggest that the changes needed for low carbon environments can also lead directly to better places and improve the health and well-being of the communities they serve the upside of down as it were.   

There was a pithy, notably fluent presentation from Rob Speyer of US-based giants Tishman Speyer, in which he said that ‘sustainability’ in real estate is a ‘no brainer’; recalcitrant developers and property  owners were ‘penny-wise and pound-foolish’ in neglecting sustainability.  It is ‘good for your brand’ he says – something that the top global corporations want to see in their HQs and elsewhere in their estate.

With regard to residential property, refreshingly, Credit Suisse MD Ian Marcus was heard to say that the next wave was needed and that it must have ‘entrepreneurial flair, a 6th sense…something exciting’.

Which is just as well because here at the Beyond Green Group we are planning and designing new places at scale with just that in mind!


How to do eco in style

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In this blog prepared to mark the 10 year anniversary of the inspirational Eden project, green living expert Joanna Yarrow shares her top ten tips for a stylish and ethical lifestyle.

View the article on the telegraph’s website here, and click here to see some more of the guest birthday blogs and other shenanigans from Eden!


Beyond Green Living’s looking for new talent

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Beyond Green Living: Communications and Research Executive  

Do you have a passion for sustainability and a knack for getting the word out? Can you find out new things fast and use that knowledge to inspire people to try out different ways of living?

We’re looking for someone to help us make change happen by delivering systematic and professional communications services to Beyond Green Living and across the whole Beyond Green Group.

Beyond Green is a pioneering interdisciplinary sustainability company. We work across sectors, delivering strategic consultancy projects, designing and producing our own sustainable developments as well as a range of practical and applied communications projects. All our works focuses on answering the question ‘how shall we live?’

This is a fantastic if demanding opportunity for a rising star of the communications industry who wants to deepen their knowledge and fast-track their interest in and passion for sustainability.

Read more here: BGL communications and research executive