Sustainable Chippendale

A Sustainable Suburb In the Making

Sustainable Chippendale is a community initiative setup to support the Sustainable Streets and Community Plan in Chippendale. If you are passionate about sustainability we'd love you to join us in getting behind this ground breaking project to establish a practical model for sustainable inner city living in Sydney.

Chippendale now even has it's own coffee tree thanks to Toby's Estate!

Toby's Estate Sustainability Project attacks again! Go Toby's Estate! This week a group of their staff was out again planting some more herbs, fruit trees on our streets and even a coffee tree!!

Amazing iniciative of this beautiful fair and sustainable local coffee house that have been roasting their own beans since 1998, and now specialize in coffee, teas and chocolate, yum!! Thank you very much guys! If only more business would do what you are doing we would be living in a way better world!

 

 

On Toby's blog:

"This morning a small group of Toby’s Estate staff took to the streets of Chippendale to begin construction on our first community garden.

Michael Mobbs, from Sustainable Chippendale, led us through the basics of gardening before we planted a wide range of herbs, fruit trees and citrus trees. We also built a raised garden bed on Rose Street just behind the Toby’s Estate head office.

The most exciting new plant, now growing on Myrtle Street, is our very own K7 varietal coffee tree!! We hope that the tree will fruit sometime this year.

The team in our cafe have also harvested some green paw paws growing on Myrtle Street and will be putting together a delicious paw paw salad which will be on the menu in the coming weeks....READ FULL ARTICLE HERE."

 

 

For Toby's Estate story, to shop, for training or just to check out what are they up to do to www.tobysestate.com.au

 

Toby's Estate supports Chippo Community Gardens!

Look at the beautiful new verge gardens we got this week, Michael Mobbs wrote on his blog this week:

 

 

 

"On Thursday this week about ten folk from Toby’s Estate coffee gardened with me while we planted out some herbs and fruit trees they’d purchased from a list I gave them.

And today a new gardener and arrival to Chippo, Anna, watered the new plants, introduced herself to some Toby’s folk and will join them in maintaining these and other parts of our road gardens.

Thanks Tobys, thanks, Anna.

And so it goes,

M"

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A big thank you to everyone involved!

Say Goodbye to Hyper-consumption!

Great article on the City of Sydney Green Villages website this month! It's about collective consumption, and it gives us a list of sites, we, Sydney people can use to share, sell, hire, lend, give everything, from surfboards, to your car space, from your old uniforms to a room in your house! Check it out:

" TIME Magazine calls collective consumption one of the 10 ideas that will change the world. But the thing about collaborative consumption is that it thrives on critical mass. You need punters to post their stuff or skills to create a marketplace. So we’ve listed a few of our favourite sites for Sydneysiders. Pay a visit to one or two, share something or sign up and make a new friend along the way.

1. Go Get / Flexicar / Green Car Share – gives you all the benefits of a car, without the hassle and expense of owning one. Access a network of locally parked cars for an hour or days at a time. When finished, just return to a dedicated parking bay and avoid the hunt for a car park! Or visit DriveMyCar rentals to borrow your neighbour’s car when they don’t need it.

2. Open Shed – make money from the things that sit idle in your house; think drills, ski gear, lawn mowers, or bikes, and rent those things you don’t have room to store or use once in a blue moon. Who could pass up an Abba fancy dress costume for a mere $2 a day?

3. Friends with Things – a little like Open Shed but things are shared for free and the focus is on keeping things local.

4. SpaceOut – brings together people who are looking for cheap local storage space with those who have spare room in their home or business.

5. Find A Uniform – lets you search or list a huge array of second-hand uniforms ranging from school tunics and Scout uniforms, to ballet shoes.

6. Yoink / Freecycle / Ziilch / OzRecycle – great sites to get free things from people near you and give away stuff you don’t need.

7. Jayride – travel A to B by carpool, rideshare, bus, shuttle, relocation cars and more or share your journey and make some cash, get to know your neighbours and commute faster in the transit lane.

8. MeeMeep – connects people on the move to people with stuff to move. So if you’ve got stuff to move, you can save time and money. And if you’re on the move, you can earn a little extra money.

9. Divvy – puts the fun back in parking by connecting people who want to rent out their driveway, apartment parking or garages, with those who need to find a parking space.

10. SwapItBaby – the place to swap what your small people have outgrown, for what they need.

11. Landshare – connects those with land to share with those who need it to grow food.

12. Airbnb – fantastic global site that matches people seeking holiday or short-term rentals with those with rooms to rent. Rent out your spare bed for a month or your entire flat while you’re sunning it up on Easter holidays.

13. Quiverizer – you can’t get much more apt for Sydney than the world’s first surfboard-swapping site!

Our list is by no means exhaustive, so if you’ve got sites that you love to visit that aren’t on our radar, please let us know in the comments below. Also, stay tuned to our site for upcoming Green Village workshops on collaborative consumption."

 

Sign Up to the City of Sydney Green Villages News here to get a bunch of great green ideas directly to your inbox monthly.

Draft Footpath Gardening Submission

As some of you might know the City of Sydney has relised an Footpath Gardening Policy, and as great as it is that the council has realised the importance and the potencial our footpath gardens have to make our streets more clean, beautiful and plesant and to provide us with food; we think it could be better, so we have drafted a submission with a few suggestions, this document was send this week to our councillours as well as to the Lord Mayor Clover Moore.
To read the document go to our resources page, click here and look for Final Footpath Sub Sust Chip.

The Sustainable House is on 3 things!


A great article about Michael Mobbs' Sustainable House, right here in Chippendale was written on 3 things this week by Mark Isaacs

3 Things is a very cool webpage, an initiative of Oxfam, they call themselves a 'movement of godness', and it is all about how if we all take small steps, together we can make a big difference! We love and strongly believe in that in Chippo!


Whenever I hear the term ‘self-sufficient household’, I always think of some kind of idealistic hippy commune built on acres of property populated by livestock, and nourished by orchards and hot springs. Or even a house created by one of those billionaires from Grand Designs that no normal human could ever dream of building. It wasn’t until I met Michael Mobbs, author of DIY novel Sustainable House, that I realised that it was possible for run-of-the-mill city slickers to transform the way they live.

Fourteen years ago, Michael Mobbs redesigned his house to become energy efficient. The house now saves $2000-$3000 every year on energy consumption." For the full article click here.

Waverley, Randwick and Woollahra Councils Home Composting Project

CONCLUSION 

Following the documented evaluation of the current residential waste management practices, the existing home composting project and the benefits of the expansion of the home composting programme across the three Councils outlined above, the following conclusions can be made.


Current waste management system

  •   The current combined landfill emissions for all councils exceed 13,000 tonnes of CO2-e.

  •   Randwick Council produces more residual waste (larger population) and therefore

    generates more landfill emissions than the other Councils

  •   Woollahra has the higher landfill emissions per household, which might be due to a higher content of paper and cardboard and garden organics in the MSW stream.

  •   Randwick Council comprises significantly more households than either Waverley or Woollahra, and has subsequent higher collection costs.

  •   Results from the quantitative assessment of ESDs:

ESD indicator                                                          System performance

ESD1: Food waste avoidance                                      Poor

ESD2: Gardening and local food production                 Uncertain

ESD3: Social capital                                                    Poor

ESD4: Enhanced household waste management         Uncertain


Home composting project

  The home composting project, extrapolated over one year, avoids 34 tonnes of CO2-e emissions associated with transport/collection and disposal of food waste to landfill.

  Results from the quantitative assessment of ESDs:

ESD indicator                                                            System performance

ESD1: Food waste avoidance                                        Excellent

ESD2: Gardening and local food production                   Excellent

ESD3: Social capital                                                     Excellent

ESD4: Enhanced household waste management          Excellent

Expansion of Home Compostingpage39image24456page39image25432

  •   The reduced quantity of food waste disposed to landfill and the reduced emissions associated with collection and transport of a home composting programme extended to 20% of the LGAs, will result in approximately a 7% decrease of total emissions associated with waste management.

  •   A system with a home composting programme extended to 40% of the LGAs will reduce the overall emissions by 13% compared to the current waste management system.

      The reduced collection and landfill disposal costs of a home composting programme extended to 20% of each LGA, will result in approximately a 6% decrease of the operational costs compared to the current waste management system.

  •   A system with a home composting programme extended to 40% of each LGA will reduce the overall costs by 15% compared to the current waste management system..

  •   If a home composting programme is extended across 20% of the three LGAs, an estimated $593 would be saved per tonne of CO2-e. If the programme were extended across 40% of the three LGAs, an estimated $641 would be saved per tonne of CO2-e.

  After a four-year period to establish the composting programme, assuming annual ‘maintenance costs’ for the home composting programme of $98,000 per annum (across the three LGAs) an estimated annual saving of $979,559 (at a 20% participation rate) to $2,057,117 (at a 40% participation rate) could be achieved through diversion of food waste from the current residual waste management system.

  Results from the quantitative assessment of ESDs:

 

ESD indicator                                                   System performance

ESD1: Food waste avoidance                                    Excellent

ESD2: Gardening and local food production               Excellent

ESD3: Social capital                                                 Excellent

ESD4: Enhanced household waste management       Excellent

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The estimated reduced greenhouse gas emissions of 7%-13% associated with a home composting programme extension to 20% and 40% of the LGA would be significant. The programme also encourages food waste avoidance and enhanced overall household waste management. Extension of the programme would also have a significant financial impact on councils’ waste management systems, namely an estimated 6-15% reduction of the operational waste management costs. Finally, the programme promotes participation and interest in gardening and local food production which will contribute positively to food sustainability (i.e. reduced food miles), and furthermore strengthens community and builds social capital. 

Friday Gardening on our streets - 24/Feb

 

Hi Gardeners,

I took this photo and laughed with pleasure.  It's a new street the council has planted with fruit trees and is watering from house roofs.  The owners have agreements to maintain the fruit trees and road verge.

Does that remind you of Chippo?

We're changing the world, one street at a time.

Join us!

Meet you at the garden shed at 9 am this Friday for an hour of gardening; it's at the basketball court.

Things to discuss; the project in the photo above, how to espalier a fruit tree, and a beaut new project involving a local business and their workers gardening in our streets.

 

Kind regards,

Michael Mobbs

Learning from our friends down in Port Phillip, Melbourne

Down in Port Phillip a group of composters is doing a really good job at maintaining their composting bins, we love getting their news and sharing what we find with them too! 
We thought this newsletter from their Dawkins Reserve Composting Bins Pilot had a lot of value for us and our bins too, love the idea of having a litter bin beside the aerobin, and great reminder that we just need to chop our organic waste so they break down easier and that we just MUST remember to add carbon material in there too, like the paper towels a lot of use use in our kitchen anyway! So here it is:

"Hello Composters


The trial of the community composting site at Dawkins Reserve has proven very popular. It's estimated that 50-60 households are using the bins, which puts them under a lot of pressure, requiring a lot of management (see Key Composters, below).  You can help the bins work better by doing the following:

1. Chop up your veggies (microbes and worms will work on it faster).
2. Add in scrunched up newspaper as well (this provides air pockets and stops the pile becoming wet and smelly, as bins 3 and 4 are now).
3. Don't clog the bins with garden waste.
4. Keep the area around the bins tidy to keep our neighbours sweet (we now have a litter bin to put rubbish in).
5. If you see something that clearly should not be in the bins (plastic bags or other stuff that won't break down) please try and remove it.

A report and presentation will be submitted to council in March/April, with our recommendations for what should happen next. If the bins can't be managed by the community, they will be removed and suggestions will be made to council for alternatives for diverting organic waste from landfill.

Key Composters
Firstly, thank you for helping to check on the bins and keep them in balance. We know that your work in covering the bin contents (which removed the fly problem) and removing litter (much easier now the litter bin is installed) has stopped the site becoming an eyesore and annoying the neighbours!

Secondly, more help is needed. Alex has been doing most of the maintenance on the bins, but she will be travelling from 23rd Feb to 17th March and she will leave the area permanently at the start of June. So the following tasks will need to be done to maintain the bins if they are to stay:

a. When bins get full, the lids need to be switched with the resting bin lids.
b. Active bins need to be stirred once or twice a week. The stake is under the brown bin. Jab it into the contents, avoiding the side walls. Move it around in a circle and give everything a good stir. You will need to do this in the four corners of the bin. The stake can be wiped off with a piece of newspaper, scrunched into the bin before replacing under the brown bin.
c. Once a week, each bin needs to be drained so the bottom doesn't get wet and anaerobic. The taps are little buggers to turn, but they should be turned so the tab moves from 6 o'clock (closed) to 12 o'clock (open). Plastic milk containers work well as receptacles and often 10 litres at a time can be drained! Diluted 1:9, this makes great plant food and can be used directly on the garden or as a foliar feed (In the future this plant food could be used as a fund-raiser for composting materials like manure, straw and lime.).
d.When bins get full (like now!), they have to be emptied. The compost is not completely ready, but can be dug into gardens. If you know someone with a garden happy to do this, please arrange for them to pick up the material. It would be ideal for you to be there and help ensure that the hatches are replaced and then use the stake to give the scraps at the top a good stir so that they can drop down. A garden fork and waterproof fertiliser-type bags lined with newspaper are ideal for bin emptying.
e. Using the spreadsheet is becoming a good way of letting other key composters know about what is happening with mixing/draining/etc, so if you have time, do read through the comments and leave your own if you can.

The work on maintaining the bins is considerable for one person, but if you can recruit more people in the area to help, it won't take much time. Unless the bins can be maintained within the community, the pilot will have to end with the bins being removed. The composting team would love more people to get involved, make these bins YOURS and take ownership of them for this part of Elwood.

We look forward to any thoughts and suggestions you may have on the future of the Dawkins Reserve Bins.

Cheers!

The Community Composting Team"

To keep up to date with what they are up to down there check their wesite Community Composting Port Phillip.

 

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