TIME.com
Heroes Home
Heroes Gallery
Photo Essays
Eco Challenge
Green Gallery
Eco House
Map Room
Quiz
Live Events
Submit Your Hero
Web Resources
News & Archives
Timeline
TIME For Kids
Email Updates
Bulletin Boards


TIME.com Home
TIME Digital
Bookmark TIME.com





Earth's 911
Search for Local Recycling Centers Near You

Enter Your Zip Code






WILLIAM MERCER MCLEOD FOR TIME

MICHAEL AND JUDY CORBETT
FEBRUARY 22, 1999


Back to the Garden: A Suburban Dream
BY DAVID S. JACKSON/DAVIS


As developer Michael Corbett strolls around the gardens of Village Homes, his pioneering experiment in ecological living in Davis, Calif., life looks pretty good. Solar panels help keep the houses warm, shared backyards bring neighbors together, and natural drainage irrigates fruit trees. Corbett reaches up to a branch, plucks off a persimmon, and bites into it. "Just right," he proclaims with a smile. Village Homes is one of the world's best examples of sustainable development--it doesn't degrade the environment that future generations will inherit. But only a quarter-century ago, the ideas behind the project were considered so radical that it almost didn't happen.

Corbett, now 58, was a young homebuilder in the early '70s, when he and his wife Judy began thinking of ways to combine environmental ecology with social ecology, which uses building design to make neighbors more neighborly. The couple bought 60 acres of tomato fields west of downtown Davis and drew up plans for a housing development that would combine residential, commercial and agricultural elements in an unprecedented mix. The houses, which would use the latest in solar-heating technology, would be built in clusters and oriented toward the backyards, which would open onto large common areas. Fruits and vegetables would grow there, using water collected by natural drainage (the land would be contoured to capture most rainwater, with excess flowing into ditches and ponds rather than concrete storm sewers). The streets would be narrow and end in cul-de-sacs. Winding walkways would connect the homes to a small courtyard of offices, reinforcing the theme of a community built for people, not cars.

The Corbetts submitted their plans to city officials--and got doused in cold water. "Everybody had a problem," recalls Judy. "The police department didn't like the dead-end cul-de-sacs. The fire department didn't like the narrow streets. The public-works department didn't like agriculture mixing with residential. And the planning department picked it apart endlessly."

Financing was another roadblock. "We went to 20 banks that wouldn't make a loan because the plan was too unconventional," says Corbett. "Everything was untried and unproven." But he and his wife were dauntless. "We never considered giving up," Judy says. "We weren't developers, we were missionaries."

1 | 2 | 3

HEROES FOR THE PLANET
heroes gallery

D E S I G N   H E R O E S
John Todd
Steven Strong
Geoffrey Ballard
Stanford Ovshinsky
Michael and Judy Corbett
William McDonough


E D U C A T O R S  
Peter Raven

O C E A N  H E R O E S
Sylvia Earle

F O R E S T  H E R O E S
Russell Mittermeier

F R E S H  W A T E R
Robert F. Kennedy and John Cronin

B U S I N E S S
Yvon Chouinard


W I L D L I F E
Cynthia Moss




DESIGN WEB RESOURCES
Community Eco-Design Network
A non-profit organization dedicated to research and implementation of ecological design and construction

Environmental Building News
A monthly newsletter with articles and reviews on green building issues and practices

Solstice
Sustainable energy resources from the Center for Renewable Energy and Sustainable Technology

Design Resources
Design links from the Amazing Environmental Organization Web Directory




Books on the environment @barnesandnoble.com
<BGSOUND LOOP=0 SRC="/time/reports/environment/heroes/audio/basma.wav">