Ecoforge
EcoForge is a long-term, place-based ecosystem designed to integrate work, living, and creative production within a regenerative framework. It brings together infrastructure, culture, land use, and community development to support collaboration, sustainability, and shared value over time. EcoForge functions as a unifying environment—allowing multiple projects, people, and practices to grow together within a single regional system.
What EcoForge Is
EcoForge is in an early formation and alignment phase, centered on research, regional outreach, and system design.
Current focus areas include:
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Engaging with regions and cities aligned with long-term regenerative development
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Exploring land-use approaches that support mixed residential and commercial activity
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Connecting with planners, partners, and communities interested in integrated ecosystems
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Designing the operational frameworks that allow multiple projects to coexist and reinforce one another
This phase is dedicated to foundation-setting and place alignment.
The Long-Term Vision
EcoForge is envisioned as a work–live–play ecosystem that consolidates creative, agricultural, educational, and media initiatives into a shared regional hub.
As it grows, EcoForge supports:
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Mixed-use residential and commercial environments
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On-site production, research, and learning spaces
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Locally rooted infrastructure and supply chains
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Cultural programming, storytelling, and public engagement
The vision emphasizes durability, adaptability, and regional integrity—allowing the model to grow thoughtfully over time.
Why EcoForge Exists
Many projects struggle because essential elements—housing, work, food systems, culture, and production—operate in isolation. EcoForge addresses this by designing the environment itself as a cohesive system. By bringing people, projects, and infrastructure into closer alignment, EcoForge creates conditions where collaboration is easier, resources circulate locally, and long-term value can be sustained.
What Comes Next
EcoForge begins with the development of a first pilot location, shaped through regional partnerships and shared planning. From there, growth unfolds in phases, guided by land, community, and long-term stewardship.
Current conversations include:
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Municipal leaders and regional planners
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Landholders and development partners
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Researchers, builders, and systems designers
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Investors aligned with patient, regenerative growth