Flourish: Design Paradigms for our Planetary Emergency by Sarah Ichioka and Michael Pawlyn is without a doubt the most illuminating primer I’ve read on regenerative thinking and design; tracing the roots of the destructive principles that have led us to cross our ecological ceiling, and synthesising revolutionary thoughts and initiatives from across the globe that pave paths to a new future. Throughout this book I was greeted by many thinkers, theories and projects that I keep as my guide: Rebecca Solnit, Jane Jacobs, Robin Wall Kimmerer, Janette Sadik-Khan, Michael Pawlyn’s TED talk that still blow me away, and, to my great surprise, Ridwan Kamil’s Taman Film (Film Park) in Bandung – my very first introduction to placemaking and creative urban planning. I discovered Taman Film in the newspaper when I was not yet 18, yet I still remember the feeling it brought me so clearly. This project, simple as it may sound, was testament to the multitude of possibilities the city holds. It brought into focus not just how valuable every inch of the city is for the commons, but also how much of the city is often lost to manic infrastructural development. But most importantly, it showed me that what’s been lost need not remain so. That too, is Sarah and Michael’s message to the planet.
In 5 chapters, Flourish dissects key shifts in thinking and design framework that we need to restore ecological integrity: Possibilism, Co-evolution, Time, Symbiosis, and Planetary Health. All throughout the book, we are introduced to individuals, collectives and companies who have found transformative approaches to produce alternative social and infrastructural materials; creating new ways of thinking that might one day be adopted as a standard. Flourish seems to answer all of our usual doubts, too. From our tendency to minimise our individual agency in the face of ecological emergency and capitalism, to our fixation with short-term growth, and to the pervasiveness of neoliberalism, Flourish shows us another way – a better way – for humankind to take lessons from local ecosystems, reintegrate with nature and transform our worldviews. Some parts I absolutely adore: the expansion on cyclical time (and, parallel to that, “the Long Now”, “Cathedral thinking”, and holarchy), which promotes durable and regenerative practices in design and asks us to consider change as an intergenerational commitment; countering Darwinism, moving towards symbiogenesis and implementing symbiogenetic paradigms into city design (this includes participatory design and biomimetic architecture, as well as integrating local ethos to community governance); and an exploration of “Doughnut Economy” by Kate Raworth, which put society and the household at its foundation, challenging the GDP as the standard metric of growth.
This book gives me hope. Bright, luminous hope, the kind some call tragic optimism, the kind that always feels futile and naïve. But it no longer feels so. Braiding Sweetgrass showed me the original lessons, the symbiosis we may still rebuild with our land, the reparations we may still offer each other. Flourish shows the people who are already paving the way, building networks of symbiosis; using the tenets of the honourable harvest to design cities and social commons. Flourish lends me new frames of thought, and now, just as I know there are nations and billion-dollar corporations who contribute more global emissions than the whole African continent, I also know that there are good people, doing good work, building good communities in many different corners of the world. And I – we – may still become them.
Do I absolutely regret not buying this in paperback? Yes. But do I regret getting this in epub and putting aside all my tbrs to read it? Not for a minute. 🌱🌷🌈