CoHousing Solutions Newsletter | January 2025 | |
Cohousing of Greater Baltimore Has Property Under Contract! | |
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Cohousing of Greater Baltimore has property under contract!
After years of hard work, Cohousing of Greater Baltimore (CGB) has property under contract, selected their architect, and is looking to grow their buyers group so they can get going on the design itself. The 1.1 acre property is in a very walkable older residential neighborhood, close to John Hopkins University. They envision a three to four story building with single -level condominiums for easy city living and aging in place.
Over the upcoming months, the community will be holding Information Sessions and Site Walks, cumulating in an in-person weekend workshop with CoHousing Solutions’ Katie McCamant on April 4th & 5th.
If you have any interest in cohousing in Baltimore, you will want to attend this workshop to explore if this might be the community for you! Get in on the ground floor to be part of designing this community.
To find out more: visit them online, and be sure to join their Save the Date list to receive future updates on the event.
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Rooted NW Gets Their Master Plan Approved, Saving Over 200 Acres of Farmland and Open Space! | |
Rendering by Rooted NW architects Caddis Collaborative | |
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CoHousing Solutions has been working with Rooted Northwest since they got their land under contract in 2019. Not just a cohousing neighborhood, Rooted NW’s founding households set out to use clustered homes to save farmland and open space in the quickly growing Seattle region. In 2020, Rooted’s founders purchased a 240-acre family dairy farm just outside of Arlington, WA.
“At its heart, Rooted Northwest is a project seeking to preserve agricultural land,” says Dave Boehnlein, permaculturist and one of the community’s founders. “Can we build a cohousing neighborhood where people who support local agriculture come together with farmers to create a resilient and caring community life?”
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The future residents and current farmers of Rooted NW share a meal in their temporary common house on the land. | |
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Existing zoning would have allowed 70 homes on five to ten acre lots, and even with the County’s Rural Cluster Subdivision Ordinance that would have used up most of the farmland. While the County loved the idea they proposed of clustering those 70 homes in two cohousing villages, leaving more than 85% of the land for farming, open space, and forest, they did not have a way to process such a proposal.
With the pandemic slowing everything down, it took several years for the County to develop a new Rural Village Housing Demonstration Program Ordinance to give them a way to process the Rooted application. And then another year-and-a-half to actually process the application. But finally, in December 2024, Rooted NW has an approved Preliminary Platt for two clustered cohousing communities saving over 200 acres of farmland and open space. The community is thrilled and moving forward to grow their buyers group, find a development partner, and get under construction.
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Rooted NW's beautiful 240 acre property features a pond, working farm, and farm stand set against lush, rolling hills. | |
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This is such an important model. It doesn’t have to be housing versus farms if we are just willing to cluster our housing more closely, we can actually use housing to save farm land.
“Rooted Northwest addresses so many of our current societal issues: saving farmland, helping new farmers get started, and creating housing that is both more socially and environmentally resilient. This model is the way people lived for centuries before our car-oriented development models took over,” says project cohousing consultant Katie McCamant, president of CoHousing Solutions. “Each of us can make a difference in how we want to see our world evolve in the choices we make for ourselves, whether that is the food we buy or the housing we purchase.”
In the meantime, there are already 14 small regenerative farming enterprises working on the land featuring fresh veggies, flowers, medicinal herbs, pigs, chickens, and more. Three of the farm ventures are joining forces with a collaborative CSA.
Find out more on their website, and email Katie at kmccamant@cohousing-solutions.com to learn about investment opportunities.
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Have Coffee, Need Grinder
My sister brought me coffee beans from Mexico, but alas… I don’t have a coffee grinder. But I do live in cohousing. One email out to the community, brought me not one, but two grinders delivered to my door…in about 10 minutes! Oh I do love cohousing! And of course, I returned both grinders with some of my imported beans.
By: Katie
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Burns Village & Farm to Host Big Reveal | |
BV&F members strategizing site design in June 2024 | |
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Another CS client and agrivillage, Burns Village & Farm, has been gaining a lot of traction with their project in Burns, TN, and will be hosting their "Big Reveal", both in person and online. Join a fun conversation about creating a place where neighbors truly connect. The gathering will feature the floor plans for Members' homes and the Common House - the heart of everything!
Zoom: Feb. 6th from 7 to 8 p.m. CT
In Person: Feb. 25 from 6 to 7:30 p.m. CT at Germantown Cohousing, 1327 5th Ave. in Nashville
Learn more about Burns Village & Farm on their website.
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Let's make your dream
neighborhood a reality.
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We provide development consulting services to help you create your sustainable neighborhood. Our team pioneered the development of cohousing in North America, and we have helped create dozens of successful communities. | |
CoHousing Solutions
(530) 478-1970
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