The Cohousing Handbook, a groundbreaking and practical guide to creating cohousing, is a must-have for the growing number of people who want to build a cohousing community. Cohousing offers an end to the isolation of the single-family suburban home. Balancing community and personal privacy, cohousing is a chance to create a modern village in an urban or rural setting. Residents own their own homes and can gather in common areas to share meals and socialize. An increasingly popular form of housing in both Europe and North America, cohousing addresses and alleviates many of the demands and pressures of modern life - everything from daycare to aging at home is easier with the help of your neighbors. The Cohousing Handbook is a guide, a manual, and a source of comfort and inspiration for those who want to create their ideal community. Cohousing is our opportunity to build a better society, one neighborhood at a time.
Although this book is a little dated, the material is meticulously organized and covers well the entire gamut of cohousing philosophy and planning. It is compiled by a couple knowledgeable and experienced in the field who offer the advantage of bring close to home in Washington State and being familiar with a number of cohousing communities established in our neighbouring home province of British Columbia.
Just last night our little community in Quesnel agreed to incorporate and to contract with a consultant to complete a feasibility study on some properties we are evaluating. Could this one day become a reality for us?
Best book I have read so far about cohousing. Other books tend to go on and on about the philosophy of cohousing but this book really gets into the nuts and bolts of making a project happen. Chock-full of lists you can use at important points in the process like searching for a site, making an offer on a site, creating a site plan, evaluating the value of the units, and much more. Extremely practical. A few of the references are out-of-date (mostly the stuff about marketing, all pre-social media). I know I will be referring back to this book frequently as my own group progresses on its way to creating our own cohousing project.
Despite being a bit dated in places, it really does get into the grooves of how these things are actually built from the ground up. It goes into getting permits, funding, organization ect. and does so very well. I think it's still incredibly relevant for doing these things today. Just ignore things like the three-ish pages on your myers briggs personality test, or marketing budgets for local papers.
Handbook is an apt name for it, with 15 chapters covering the lifecycle of development. Since the book is 20 years old, some of the context was outdated, but overall it was interesting to get detailed perspectives on traditional development in a cohousing context (land acquisition, financing, contractors, etc) but also the un-traditional pieces that go with cohousing (group decision making, conflict resolution, private vs. common space considerations).
This is the best book I've read to help a group self-organize for co-housing. It's a shame there isn't a newer release, but much of it is still very relevant.
Another casualty of Mr. Dewey. Damn him. Not at all what I expected. More of how to live in a East Coast Style Co-Op than a commune type community. May be slightly outdated if researching the legal aspects of a condo type style community.