Alessandro Mortarino - from Megachip
There is a very interesting example in Italy on which would be helpful if every citizen sensitive to the future of their territory and put an entire planet's attention. The protagonist is a small town of Milan hinterland (just under 1,700 residents): Cassinetta Lugagnano. In recent years has chosen to save their land by new waves and cemented the path of "zero growth", ie of full sustainability.
And given that in recent weeks a group of "brave" citizens (resident in that sort of "macro" which is the area-Langhe-Roero Monferrato, the territory which was recently nominated for recognition as a Unesco "World Heritage") started to develop a project inspired by his "zero growth", we like to tell our readers the experience Cassinetta Lugagnano, through the words of its mayor, Domenico Finiguerra. While waiting for the live cultures that will be released by the group of "courageous" of our hills, do not materialize in a program ispiratorio for public administrators, civil society whole, builders of a new model of community happy ...
The group of "pioneer" is drafting the manifesto of a committee which will be titled "Stop the use of the land - the Movement for the Defence of the right to territory is not cemented." The pillars which will be the realization of the conclusion of a historical period that he placed a large part of the development of the entire area in the consumption of new greenfield and agricultural and the overcoming of the equation "more land consumption = more development," said The alternative, namely that: the current existing buildings (if properly managed ...) can largely meet the housing needs of the entire area and production and thus contribute to the maturation of a consciousness of the physical limits of the territory ...
To provide a simple matter to which to reflect, remember - purely by way of example - which, according to data of the Regional Sergio Conti, the sole province of Cuneo about 40% of the warehouses are empty or only partly built: they were, that is, but apparently built not to be used ... Yes, we're just talking about those sad, huge industrial warehouses that dot-craft our plains (but, unfortunately, often the tops of the hills rich) as a perpetual memory of the apparent renunciation of human nature and a sense of beauty. One thing outrageous, considering that cover the fertile grounds of inert materials helps to warm the planet and that their land free from cement factories will be the real of the future ...
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