Hi, recently I’ve been making these pictures/photobashes of different places in a solarpunk world, trying to demonstrate technologies or other possibilities, or values like reuse that I consider to be solarpunk. I’m working on some cityscapes but I’ve been thinking a lot about rural places since that’s where I’m from, and how they might change with some of the societal crumbles and contractions I feel like are impending. In my grandparents’ time, the region where I grew up was lots of small villages, usually bunched up around water and local industry, with farms spread out beyond that. With cars, people have spread out in these sprawling bedroom communities that are becoming ever more dense with people. Gas and groceries were 40 minutes away by car, and I feel like most people I knew drove an hour each way for work.
I wanted to do a scene sort of showing how things might change in rural areas if cars became impractical (due to shortages etc) and how things could be rebuilt better. I have a sense of what I want to include:
- Dense village surrounded by farms and forest, an abandoned mcmansion or large house far enough out to be impractical
- High speed rail access to the village
- Solar panels
- Waterwheels
- Farms
- Algae farming
For the farms, I could drop in bits and pieces of photos of farmland and make it work, I worked on a farm for a few years and feel comfortable enough for that. But I suspect folks who know more about farming, and especially folks who are into solarpunk visions of the future, might have stronger opinions on how it should be done, so I figure now is a good time to ask. What would you like to see? What should be done differently than we do now? Anything from layouts to the size of fields, to specific crops would be useful.
Edit: this’ll be in North America, by the way. (Probably northern US States though I haven’t picked one) The surrounding trees, general style of mountain, and the buildings will be based on that assumption anyways.
edit 2: here’s the current rough draft to give you an iea of the space I’m planning around
Thanks!
In northern latitudes, these kind of chinese style greenhouses that conserve heat better: https://www.motherearthnews.com/organic-gardening/chinese-greenhouses-for-winter-gardening-zm0z17amzmul/
Although the straw mats are probably better replaced with bubble foam insulation like this: https://smallfarms.cornell.edu/2011/10/soap-bubbles-to-insulate-greenhouses-a-new-approach-to-energy-conservation/
I never thought about it, but yeah, turns out greenhouses as I know them are a really good example of the one-size-fits-all approach to building enabled by the wealth of cheap energy we’re currently enjoying. I never really thought about how inefficient the ones I worked in were, especially in the winter. I really love these new designs. I was half expecting to find that they were dug into the ground to help regulate the temp, but it seems like the height is important to getting enough sunlight. They did say it helped to add earth berming on the west, north, and east walls, and that the fellow building one in Siberia had buried bart of it and used earth berming anywhere above ground. It’d be an interesting fit for a south-facing hill where they could get the best of both worlds