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Boodaville Fete of Fun

Boodaville Fete of Fun

crowdfunding campaign for Boodaville

we are crowdfunding!!

Posted on Feb 9, 2017

See the campaign and the amazing video Bernat made here

Boodaville Fete of Fun 

Posted on Feb 27, 2017

So how much did we raise?

This event, and the crowdfunding campaign, is so that Boodaville will be able to open again in April and continue working towards a better future for people and planet through permaculture education and the development of a working example of an eco-community that live regeneratively – leaving the world better than they find it.

The key to this is design, ecology, understanding how a whole system works so it can be nourished. Permaculture ideas are radical – focusing on the sharing economy, ideas of abundance, and working with nature to produce high yields in terms of meeting needs, caring for the environment and having a positive social impact.

Come and visit us, or read up on Permaculture to see more about how permaculture design can shape your life – and for now we really appreciate any support reaching our target!!

We raised 521 euros from the event and that brings us to 52% of the cowdfunding target!!




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Boodaville Bonds vs banks making profit out of money they’ve created

Boodaville Bonds vs banks making profit out of money they’ve created

“Boodaville Bonds” - an opportunity to invest in a great project and utilise a method of finance which is built on community, trust, and genuine social responsibility from both borrower and lender.

Posted on Nov 17, 2015

by boodaville

This post is to say a huge thank you to one of my Boodaville Bonds investors who has reinvested the first repayment of €250. After consideration of what this could be used for the best option is to take the cash to the bank and pay down part of the loan I took out. (I didn’t get enough investors to cover the full amount needed!) By paying down the loan I am paying less interest to a financial system I don’t want to support and spending (slightly) more of it on moving forward with Boodaville. Here’s some more about why I believe in alternative finance:

As some of you may know I recently completed the online masters level MOOC “Money and Society” with IFLAS The Institute for Leadership and Sustainability. Jem Bendall, one of the professors on the course, criticises our money system and talks about alternatives in this TED video. Matt Slater, the other professor on the course is a nomad who helps and consults on setting up alternative currencies (as well as geeky stuff like coding software for running alternative currencies)

I was already committed to looking for alternatives to the system before the course because permaculture includes applying the basic ethics of caring for people and planet to different domains of our lives and Finances and economy is one of these domains. After completing the Money and Society course I am even more deeply committed to avoiding loans and speculative investments. I highly recommend taking the course! Some of the suggested ideas are alternative currencies, ethical investments, local markets and sharing when we have surplus. This is what I wrote when I launched the Boodaville Bonds  in 2014 :

The Boodaville Project is a socially, environmentally and economically responsible project that is educating people about sustainable living and leading by example. As problems with the current economic system are increasingly obvious I am hoping to reach the level of financing I need via an alternative to the traditional banking system, here are two statistics I would like to highlight :

– More than 97% of all money in the global economy is created by banks when they make loans, and most of this goes into speculation and not into the real economy. This benefits the rich and increases inequality. (positivemoney.org and Bernard Lietaer “The Future of Money”)

– The overall effect of interest payments is that 10% of the population get richer, while 80% get poorer. (Margrit Kennedy. “Money without interest and inflation” p.35)

“Boodaville Bonds” are an opportunity to invest in a great project and utilise a method of finance which is built on community, trust, and genuine social responsibility from both borrower and lender. The returns I offer are stated in the payment plan I created.

FAQs

What is The Boodaville Project?

Have a look here

Why should I trust you?

I have been dedicated to this project for 6 years, we are now an official Association and I’m at a point where I really need some finance to get to the next stage and be able to comfortably host guests, teachers and volunteers. The loan repayments are secured by the fact that I will sell 75% of the project, including land and buildings, when we become a Cooperative in 2018. You can see the development of the project during the last 6 years on the blog and can see my long-term dedication to the project. I am confident that the financial plan to sell the 75% share stated will be successful. If, however, there is a problem with this I can personally assure you that there will be enough money to cover the loan payments due in 2018.

Why don’t you borrow from an ethical bank?

I am looking to pay back the loans at a fixed date in the future. I am trying this approach first. If i need to, I will look into ethical banking options.

Why not use the Coopfunding initiative which is exactly what you need?

As an association we will look into this idea, but still have the problem of wanting to pay all the money back on the sale of the project later.




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Permaculture teaching Matters with Rosemary Morrow 2015

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Permaculture teaching Matters with Rosemary Morrow 2015

a week in Mallorca with Rosemary Morrow

Oct 28, 2015



At 72 years old Rosemary is a truly inspirational person, absolutely dedicated to sharing her immense knowledge of permaculture (eg developing resilience to disasters, up to date techniques on capturing energy, facts and figures to leave you in awe about our planet’s water resources) and her wisdom from many many years of teaching. The other two excellent facilitators on the course were Alfred Decker (Permamed) and Patricia Pereira (Valedalama). Alfred was brilliant as always, particularly skilled at sock puppetry (a teaching technique to discuss serious topics in a lighter way), being hilarious, and throwing in anecdotes from his own experiences as an environmental activist and it was a real pleasure to meet Patricia and share ideas about education and working with young people. In fact we were living the reality of mixed age classes on this course because we had some teenagers in the group learning with the rest of the adult group. I had great fun working with them on our group task – we planned and presented an idea for a full permaculture course (PDC) based around a survival camp, and frankly, our idea and presentation kicked ass. 

It is a challenge now to see how this idea can be made into a reality, where teenagers are learning what’s really important in the world, experimenting with fundamental issues like water, food production, energy and building, looking for features of sustainable efficient ways of living, and all the time thinking about how they can go on to share their knowledge. A lovely phrase from the course is the “each one teach one” philosophy where anyone who feels passionate about what they are learning is encouraged to go out and share. And as we all know… the very best way to consolidate your knowledge of a topic is to teach it!

 

The parts in black are more about teaching, in green it’s more about Permaculture

This intense week long course was about teaching permaculture – different strategies to engage groups of adults and teenagers, sharing knowledge about learners needs, a host of ideas for games and dynamics, reflections on the structure and flow of a course. Here are some of the highlights for me, and top quotes from our insanely knowledgeable course facilitator Rosemary Morrow.

DAY ONE

  1. Teacher ethics – “OFFER – clear accurate verifiable information. LANGUAGE – succint and respectful INTERACT with learners as aware trustworthy and knowledgeable” Rosemary Morrow. Rowe’s ethics are a great example, and as teachers, the activity of clarifying our own ethics is fundamental. I’m a HUGE fan of the word verifiable here’s a quote: “Westerners are increasingly opinionated but are less verifiable
  2. Because permaculture is everything, and everything is connected, we as teachers are aware of the interlinked elements of our Learning Ecosystem – Learning space, learners, teachers, teaching methods, tools.
  3. “We are all at different places on the journey”  Remember this in your class code – no assumptions or judgements we just go learning.
  4. To check understanding give learners a real chance to ask by using questions you can’t just say yes to: “What’s not clear?” “Is anything unclear?”
  5. “Is anyone else doing anything else like Permaculture? In 30 years, no one has come up with anything better, we’ve just made improvements to the original ideas. Permaculture is unique”
  6. Don’t mistake traditional for what’s good to repair the Earth
  7. Have a look at a free online course “Designed Resilience to Disaster”
  8. The future might be… fungus (Radical Mycology) and small scale protein sources that can be grown in cities – aquaponics, mushrooms. The present is.. speeding up the diffusion of permaculture ideas and moving from indiviual to community, from sustainability to resilience.
  9. Apparently 60% of Barcelona is illegal… I might have to get the verifiable source for that one Rowe…
  10. “In older societies people who shared and were generous were revered, nowadays people who accumulate wealth and don’t share are the revered ones”
  11. The third permaculture ethic – “Fair Share” really means “Return surplus to need”. A great way of understanding it! and having just done a fascinating, system shattering Money and Society MOOC, I am acutely aware that this is the OPPOSITE of what we do with money – which is arguably societies biggest problem.
  12. How do I check if my permaculture principle is a principle? Ask myself, is it globally applicable? Principles are Global Directives.

DAY 2

  1. Great adult educators from our past – Socrates, Ivan Illich wrote a book “Deschooling society” which I need to read, Paulo Friere wrote “Pedagogy of the Opressed”, and from the present – John Dewey, Parker Palmer and Vandana Shiva, a great activist see the Seed Freedom movement. I should also look up John Holt “How children fail”. I just found a very interesting article from another teacher at Schumacher College, UK (where Vandana Shiva teaches) about how to teach by Jonathan Dawson
  2. More educators from our past – Jesus. I’d never thought of him as an educator, maybe that’s because I’m a maths teacher and he was teaching forgiveness and care of people. (People Care is one of the three ethics at the base of the whole of Permaculture). And Ghandi, the most amazing example of teaching by example – “Be the change you want to see in the world”
  3. “We are all teachers and learners” I’m very excited by the idea that information is shared and consolidated as a network model, similar to patterns we see in nature, designed for sharing and growing. We think learning happens “top down” but actually it is from interconnections between many different people. (Systems thinkin!) I feel that all teachers should be looking to bring this style of learning into their classrooms. In recent years I have spent a lot of time doing carefully planned group work in classes with 14-16 yr olds and I couldn’t agree more that by talking to each other they take their learning forward much more effectively than the “formal education” model.
  4. “Can you manage your situation?” A quick way to check that someone is ok, without getting the whole class involved in “helping” to take them to the bathroom, offer them herbal remedies etc.
  5. I thought the summary of Learners inherent qualities was excellent. Learners: bring knowledge and ideas; when they feel safe they like to be challenged; prefer to cooperate; learn better when involved; are often not confident; like to be treated as individuals (eg. not “you were all talking”)
  6. Advice on using videos as a learning tool – 1) tell the story of what you’re going to watch 2) give students a task to do while watching eg a question to think about – “How did the people cope with the problem?” 3) watch the video 15 mins max 4) debrief and answer the task questions.
  7. “In Havana, Cuba, a city of 2.2 million people, they went from importing 80% of their food to producing 80% of their food in about 2 years”  

DAY 3

  1. Teacher qualities – R . E . K . S  (Respect, Enthusiasm, Knowledge, Safe learning space) An important element of Respect is to acknowledge everyone – making eye contact with each one of your students, and talking to each one.
  2. “Students are not well able to rate their learning” The idea of “rate your teacher” is controversial and led us to a discussion about whether you should like your teacher.
  3. When a discussion such as “Should you like your teacher?” gets popular and you can see that time is being taken up perhaps you could use the following reason to cut it short “This is a self-reflecting exercise so we’ll leave it there – we could carry on all day”
  4. Power and Authority – A teacher is aiming for Natural Authority which is granted by the students as they see that you know your subject very well, that you take responsibility for what happens in the classroom, that your behaviour is an example; you keep your own issues out of the classroom and avoid talking about yourself unless it’s completely relevant.
  5. Behaviours identified which reveal a liking for power:   1) using sarcasm (jokes and having a sense of humour are important – but the joke must include everyone and not do any harm) 2) encouraging favourites 3) keeping students when session is finished 4) teacher talking about themselves or building up their own reputation about their accomplishments.
  6. Universal Human Needs – these are identified needs for any person, do you agree with the list? Physical well being, Meaning, Play, Connection, Honesty, Autonomy.
  7. NON-VIOLENT COMMUNICATION We did a session on this and I think it is crucial for ALL teachers to grasp the basics in order to avoid conflicts in and out of their classrooms. I think most successful teachers have it from experience, but here is a quick summary. 1) Relax, listen, be conscious of your body language make sure it is open (eg hands behind back). 2) Address your feeling and your need. Choose one of the basic emotions : Anger, fear, disgust, joy, sadness, surprise, refer to a specific situation and clarify the outcome that you would like. The example of calling the car mechanic : When the car broke down 200km into a 300km journey I felt angry because the car had just been fixed And I want the car to be fixed with no further charge.
  8. Read about NVC – Marshall Rosenberg
  9. Touch – It is acceptable to touch anyone from any culture between elbow and shoulder (where police make arrests!)
  10. “Criticism never improved anyone”
  11. Language that works : Tell your students when they are right. Don’t finish their sentence, but do give them clues and hints. Give degrees of approval to stay genuine “That’s the way we’re thinking” “Maybe – how would anyone else do it?”
  12. Appraisal not criticism! Is that even possible? Well yes, if you accept that criticism isn’t going to help you just say what you see and make no judgement. “I notice you were standing in front of the board during the presentation. I notice your answers were short. I saw you moving around a lot. I heard you use inappropriate language.” I’m just making stuff up, but the idea is you stick to observations.
  13. Great closing activity from Aline! Students throw the ball to each other, they ask a question about the lesson content, and the named person they throw the ball to answers the question, then asks the next one.
  14. “We don’t want people to do less bad we want them to do good”

DAY 5

  1. Teaching tools: cards, post-its, balls, a permaculture teaching game called Garden Flow is supposed to be good. For the web of life game you can give people cards with “social” on one side and “ecological” on the other side (eg. owl / public library)
  2. Cognitive Protection
  3. Monitoring – In pairs talk about what you’ve learnt, then feedback to the class with an answer to a question “Give one word about how much you learnt” “Give one sentence summarising what you learnt today”
  4. Rhythm of a class – energy levels rise, then level off, then drop. Give a time for reflection during a moment of lower energy. Look out for drops!
  5. “If you have a job interview, you are much more likely to get the job when the interview is after lunch, than when the interview is before lunch”

DAY 6

  1. “To prepare a topic for the first time you need about 6 hours preparation for a 1 hour class”
  2. “Imagination is for finding solutions, not for designing”
  3. Monitoring and revision activity (1hr)- With the person or people next to you, go through your notes and talk about the course. As a teacher you can go around and listen/see notes.
  4. Appraisal of group work (about personal/social experience not content) “What was your experience of the group process” Ask each person in the group in turn
  5. Permaculture is not just for hippies, the UNDP use it, and several members of parliament representing “Green” parties around the world have done PDC courses!




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First Crowdfunding Campaign in 2012 with Indiegogo

First Crowdfunding Campaign in 2012 with Indiegogo

The process of getting fundings for Boodaville

August 2012

we made it! thank you so much for your support everyone!

 

We got the funding!

 

12th June 2014

 

Boodaville is proud to announce that we have been approved for EU funding through the Erasmus+ program for the event August 20-31 2014. We are working with the association “viaje a la sostenibilidad“. The course title is “Sustainable living and self-reliance” and participants from around Europe can come via our partner associations. We’ll be covering many aspects of permaculture and implementing some of the permaculture designs i’m currently working on. Big news! and lots of work…





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Permaculture Design Certificate / Curso de Diseño en Permacultura

Permaculture Design Certificate / Curso de Diseño en Permacultura

finishing my Permaculture Design Certificate (PDC)

Posted on Apr 23, 2014

So i’m half way through my Permaculture Design Certificate (PDC) course here in Barcelona. It is organised by a team of facilitators who got together via Permacultura Barcelona and it is very awesome.

We have so far studied (quite intensively at times) the theory and principles of permaculture, how to organise your house and vegetable garden, how to build efficiently and sustainably using natural materials, some techniques for observing nature so you can imitate the best bits and, my personal favourite; food forests. Of course each of these is a giant subject in itself, but the PDC gives you a base covering all the elements of sustainable/self-reliant/resilient living – that’s why it’s such an important qualification for me to have. And no, it’s not completely hippy (you get comfortable quite quickly and start to enjoy moments like “I think a couple of om’s before we start would be a good idea”)

It leaves me in a bit a quandry, to be honest, about how I am going to transform the Boodaville site into a permaculturally functional space, but i know stopping to plan the site carefully now is going to save me a huge amount of energy in the future. A problem I have already spotted, for example, is that a fairly steadfast rule of permaculture design is to have your veg garden less that 50m from the house, but at the moment in Boodaville parts of the “house” are already more than 50m away from other parts of the “house”… (ooh – maybe i put the veg garden in between and solve that one…. we’ll see later on how the actual plan develops)

14th December 2014

20th April 2015

 

Sadly, on Sunday sitting behind the yurt, I found myself doing an activity which could be considered meditative, but that actually only serves to guide your thoughts to the depressing reality of plastic pollution. Did you know that plastic never biodegrades, it just breaks down into smaller and smaller pieces? So when you leave a tarpaulin over a sand pile, in an attempt to “save your sand” from the wind and 6 months later find that half of the cover has gone, you know that the tiny plastic ribbons it has disintegrated into are now littered around an otherwise unpolluted valley.

The task I quietly undertook while chastising myself for allowing this to happen, was picking the tiny blue ribbons out of the grass bit by bit. On one hand knowing that every piece I pick out means less traces of plastic in the soil, and on the other hand wondering how many people in the world have left tarpaulins to completely disintegrate. The plastic which I saw as a solution to what was essentially a financial problem (I paid for the sand and didn’t want to lose it) has caused pollution, wasted my time in trying to clear that pollution up, and didn’t even really work as for most of the last six months since the sand was mostly open to the air.

In the future I will think more, everyone needs to think more, about whether the solution is really a solution…

Dec 2016

Far away from Boodaville we’ve seen the world rocked by “post-truth” politics in 2016. I can’t write a summary of the year without recognising changes in the global political landscape. The effects of these surprise election and referendum results will start to be seen in 2017, but from our perspective they reinforce the idea that “democracy is not just a ballot box “.  As well as being aware of global issues and ticking boxes / supporting campaigns, we must focus on the longer-term; start engaging in the deep work of co-creating our own communities and find new forms of direct democracy to shape our collective future. 2017 will be the year that Boodaville publishes a prospectus outlining the present situation and future plans as we start seriously looking for people who want to buy-in and join and shape our eco-community.

 

The geodesic dome is the big change on site this year and for me this beautiful structure symbolises the connections that have been made between volunteers, participants and facilitators and fills me with energy to carry on with this project. Thank you so much to each and every one of you who has been part of Boodaville this year, let’s all stay on the path of people care, earth care and fair share and leave the world a little (or a lot) better than we find it.

Anna




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Boodaville : The Return

Boodaville : The Return

Going back to Boodaville

Posted on Mar 5, 2014

by boodaville

It was a beautiful sunny day for our return after six months, and a fine day to introduce my daughter Kira (3 months old) to the olives, but the experience was tainted by  seeing the winter damage and then discovering i’ve been robbed. The yurt roof and half the house roof were out of place so there was some wet and mouldy clearing up to do.

It’s a shame about the fridge being taken, we’d talked about moving it somewhere safer, and then didn’t. It was the most valuable thing on site by a long way. So far the only other thing i’ve seen missing is the stove from the yurt.

There was a wave of let’s go back to the city and give up on the whole thing, but it passed quickly as we fixed the damage in a couple of hours, and the weekend has left me inspired to get back to work on the 2014 objectives for this project. On the up side, the veg patch is going in it’s own direction with some spontaneous lettuce and onions and the apple tree is still alive. if i can find a second hand fridge i should be able to replace the missing stuff for a few hundred euros. Also if you build your house out of eco/natural materials then you don’t have to feel too bad when it gets blown away and deposits itself in bits all the way up the valley…




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Personal journey

Personal journey

A part of my journey building Boodaville

19th October 2011

I always thought that if i had millions i would pay for giant adverts telling people the stuff i usually just post on facebook – i first remember thinking about it with the whole “your tv wastes energy when on standby” thing. Many years before people actually changed their behaviour on that one it seemed obvious to me that people, at least as a first step, needed to be informed. I feel the same way about the spoon picture i shared a few weeks ago, (you’d think it was obvious right?)

I wonder how much influence the graffiti next to the M40 in the 90’s had on my ideas – “why do I do this every day?” written in huge white letters  along a fence. Anyone else remember that? It must have reached millions.

Looking at it now my whole life plan has been guided by the idea of informing people about the stuff big companies and the government don’t want to tell you. At least let people hear both sides of the story. 

14th May 2012

so, thoughts on my birthday.

i’m quite old now.. eek

at the first event in 2009 the festival was a simple birthday party and on a terribly designed webpage which greg franklin loved to hate, i placed a wish list of birthday presents for me and the land. in the early stages i saw us as the same thing. it was all so exciting that multi-use tools and folding washing up basins were all i wanted.

when the house is more than a pile of concrete i’ll surely enter a new stage of craving furnishings and fancy tiles, but “the boodaville project” has now grown, into something wonderful, but also something that crosses the line from hobby into damn hard work and right now i spend all my energy and savings on rebar, steel capped boots and finding doors. so what i’m trying to say is, if was going wish for presents, i’d want things for myself- clothes, a wallet that isn’t falling apart, fancy shampoo, a 6th string for my guitar, a music mix, a pannier bag, books, dvds, fun (yet eco) things, tickets to fun places…  just saying like…

3rd July 2012

so booda, what IS permaculture?

Alfred Decker set us straight on all this when he gave an Intro course on the last weekend of June – here are my thoughts.

in one word, mulching. the philosophy is summed up by this: you take straw, that is a waste product, put very little energy into giving a fat protective layer around your vegetable garden, this enhances the quality of the soil and the health of your vegetables a disproportionate amount compared to the initial effort, a cracking return on your investment.

but it’s not all about gardening.

in my own words: permaculture is planning your space and lifestyle, whether in a city or a field, using as little energy and resources as possible to achieve your aims, and being imaginative in order to turn problems into something positive – all the time being aware of the effect that your plan has on the health of the planet, on other people, and always considering whether you are working within your fair share of the world’s resources.

does that sound familiar? yes, it turns out that boodaville is permaculture. why didn’t I realise this before??? thanks alfred (there’s a ton of information out there with more definitions and details of what I’ve tried to summarise above)

diary of a permaculture weekend (partly in a heatwave)

during the first two hours of workshops in a serious chunk of shade, we were given some of the key “principles of permaculture” such as:

1) look for beneficial relationships within a systemand make the most of them

2) find the way to have the greatest effect by the least effort/change (mulching!!!)

3) seek, use and encourage diveristy (don’t put all your eggs in one basket)

4) use living systems – bacteria can clean our water just as well as energy guzzling machines, if we re-think it a bit.

(but the great thing is that permaculture is just an umbrella term for many different ways of applying these principles, and there are many more that weren’t mentioned. I mean it basically seems to mean thinking about what you are doing!

after a beans brunch I showed off my parsley forest (demonstrating principle 1) and we took ourselves and a picnic over to the swimming hole.

can you imagine us sitting in the shade by the river, in the peace and quiet, planning the self-sustaining lush utopia that boodaville will be? well it wasn’t quite like that for the last hour when we were joined by a huge shouting family, 4 loud locals – who, to my surprise got naked, and just up the river was the dutch contingent. permaculture is not all about gardening, but our conversations did go in that direction – we covered composting in great detail, and a bit of organic farming and then food forests. the next step is to identify plants and shrubs which grow with little water and incorporate them in to the plan.

on sunday morning alfred left us, but we are very proud to present the compost box, complete with lift up plastic condensation catching lid, and a well mulched veg patch which are fruits of our labour that day:

the glass is half empty

Sep 7, 2012

i slipped on the stairs carrying my bike on the way to my first day back at school, ouch, then got a puncture later that day. after fixing it my tyre went flat again yesterday. i have a seriously bad cough that has kept me awake for some of the worst nights sleep i’ve ever had – including last night in the house at boodaville on my own without a car. i ended up calling friends at 2am for support, then making tea in my outdoor kitchen in the valley at 3am. (which was actually quite pleasant). the big one, however, is that the car cost 1900 euros. mentally i was prepared for somewhere in the range of 1000 – can  you see the difference? the difference is worth the same as labour to build 1/4  of my walls.

the glass is half full

Posted on Sep 7, 2012

i’ve started the walls! the builder is brilliant and today i got my car back which makes life a whole lot easier



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Planning permission for the first round late 2011

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Planning permission for the first round late 2011

the process of getting permissions for the Boodaville project

6th January 2011

 

My next job is to properly mark out the ground for the refugio* I’m so close to getting planning permission for. The architect finished the basic plans last year, and we can start preparing for the digger to come in. We’ve decided to start with the tourist building – refugio, and then afterwards build the house where the original stone building already exists.

 

* this is the new official name for the larger building, with bathrooms, 3 guest bedrooms and a multi-use sala that i am building on the second terrace. (there has been much name confusion which is now over)



7th June 2011

 

I think i finally recovered from my birthday at Boodaville, Primavera Sound in Barcelona and brilliant family time in the UK, and it’s lucky i did that before i got the call from the architect saying that due to a horrible twist in the Spanish bureaucratic jungle it appears that in the 13 months since we sent the plans off we have achieved the following: plans arrived in Teruel where someone said “no, we don’t approve them any more, we changed it and you need to send them to the Valderrobres office”.

 

20th September 2011

 

Here’s the story of my plans so far….

The architects worked very hard to prepare some excellent diagrams and plans and had them ready in May 2010. Civil servant 1 had to put 4 pieces of paper in with the plans and send them to the planning office in Teruel. One of these papers involved him typing something. Not only did he fail to put in the necessary papers but the whole project took three months to arrive at the Teruel office.

In Teruel another civil servant opened the project, saw the papers were missing and sent back a letter asking for more documents. Unfortunately he also was unable to request the correct documents, so after hassling civil servant 1 to do the correction and repeating the three month wait for him to send it to Teruel again the project application was still not complete.

A year into the process and we received a second letter from Teruel saying we still had not included the correct documents. This time an architect who works part-time for the council checked our project and helped us get the actual correct documents sent.

By some miracle we only had to wait two months for a reply this time (let’s assume that was because everything was correct so the civil servant passed the envelope on to his superior instead of doing something complicated like replying). So in June 2011 someone finally opened the dossier and looked at the plans. At which point they immediately found that there were several things which didn’t comply with a law passed in April 2011 and sent it back “unapproved”. It didn’t even get registered as an application for planning permission for 18 months because of these slow processes and since then the law has changed.

 

29th September 2011

So we found a common enemy. We will all blame Carla, the lady who worked at the main district office for a few months covering a maternity leave. She only approved one of the two buildings, and also classified it as the wrong type of tourist accommodation.

Who knows if it really is all her fault, but since my idea to have tourists and myself living on the same piece of land yet in different buildings doesn’t tick any of their boxes describing how country hotels should be, I am now going to live in a shed. No, hang on, I didn’t say that. I am not going to live in a shed, I am going to build one – to make sure I use all the square meters the current law allows me – then sleep in it occasionally and apply for a “change of use” in many years time to convert it to a home. This means the two buildings will be

1) a building for rural tourism/living in

2) an agricultural shed built on the ruins of the original building.

but get this… not only is it much quicker to apply for permission to build a shed, but the valderrobres planning office can give me the permission to build so I avoid any of these ridiculous three month waits. AND I can put a green roof on the shed. AND – get this – I have to become a farmer. That means I am allowed to build an agricultural building. i’m going to go and look at how to register with the local cooperative now

on the downside— we are literally back to the drawing board for two weeks

 

22nd December 2011

I went to españa profunda

 

Posted on Dec 22, 2011

 

Teruel does exist – I went there!

The yurt is so cozy! I mean who’d have thought the insulation and the shit porch would make such a difference? and the fleecy blanket someone left behind makes a perfect curtain, cheers whoever that was. The fire stayed lit until 4.30 when I chucked a bit more on. The only cold bit was when I got in the car at dawn on my journey to Teruel city, the county capital…

So, deepest Spain… It’s flat, but not desert. The hills in the distance were white on top, but not proper snow. There were trains on the old railway line, but not real ones. The main tourist attraction seems to be poor replicas of trains and mining paraphernalia. I was in Teruel city for approximately half an hour to pick up my project “visado” then had to rush back (6 hr round trip) to get back to my local council office to hand it in for the final step.

It was my most important day so far… one step away from permission to build the shed… and should have been exciting, but my local civil servants pretty much crushed all my excitement by appearing to be determined not to let the project go ahead.

The words that come out of their mouth are “we’ll have the permission in January” but under their breath they say things like “I wouldn’t have passed this project, but Juan did and he’s my boss” and then, instead of them giving me a list of papers I need to hand in… I have to tell them!

“No you don’t need anything else apart from the project”

“Don’t I need the paper showing I’m in the cooperative?”

”Oh yes, you need that”

Seriously.. if I was relying on just them, would this project ever get approved? It’s almost a social experiment I’d like to try.

 

12th January 2012

the ajuntamiento promised again that they will have my permission to build (the shed) next thursday, I found someone to come and chop a tree down for me next saturday, and I spoke to a man about digging.  I went for the traditional approach of asking around town where he lives, then ringing the bell and interrupting his pasta lunch. At which point he said “why don’t you call me?” but then kindly offered to come round and have a look. He knew exactly where my place was, which could be seen as either worrying or reassuring depending on your mood that day.

 

Additions Sept 2020:

I did pick up a paper on the following Thursday, and then started the slow process of building the legal “almacen” which we call the “New House” in February 2012. In 2019, when trying to sign off the finished buildings, it turned out that I hadn’t actually finished the full process of getting permission for the “almacen”, and this is being sorted out as part of the current application to host educational courses and activities.





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