Community growing and urban food ecosystem platforms
People have lost touch with the natural world
Across the world, people are becoming increasingly disconnected from the natural environment that sustains us. This separation isn't just about living in cities — it's about losing the deep, everyday relationship with nature that shaped human culture for millennia.
This disconnection has profound consequences. When we don't experience nature regularly, we struggle to understand our dependence on healthy ecosystems. We miss out on the mental and physical health benefits that contact with the natural world provides. Children grow up without developing the curiosity and care for nature that comes from direct experience.
The challenge is urgent because this disconnection makes it harder for people to support the environmental action we desperately need. It's difficult to protect what feels abstract or irrelevant to daily life.
Nature is absent from most people's daily lives
Most people spend their days in environments almost entirely shaped by human design — offices, homes, streets, and buildings with little or no natural elements. Even in cities with parks, many neighborhoods lack accessible green space, and urban planning often treats nature as an afterthought rather than an essential component of healthy communities.
This absence isn't just aesthetic. When nature is missing from our daily environments, we lose opportunities for the small, regular interactions that build connection and awareness. The solution requires deliberately designing nature back into the places where people live, work, and move through their days.
Community growing and urban food ecosystem platforms
Technology that supports community gardens, urban farms, and local food systems that connect people to the natural processes of growing food. These platforms help coordinate shared growing spaces, connect people with local food sources, and build the knowledge and relationships that come from participating in food production within urban environments.