Inspirational projects publicly accessible at new web home

A new website promoting future-focused projects created by sustainable practitioners has been launched by the Centre for Sustainable Practice at Otago Polytechnic: http://www.sustainable-practice.org

The website is designed to create a global community of practice around sustainable development and to encourage people to collaborate on existing or new projects. The first projects loaded have been created by participants in the Centres graduate programmes in Sustainable Practice.

The Centres Director, Steve Henry, says the work of the graduate programme participants is relevant and useful, and should be available to others.

"The projects are real rather than theoretical, so theyre useful for others and can be built upon," he explains. "We are looking to develop this site so anyone in the world can log in and upload a project or contribute to the ones already listed."

http://www.sustainable-practice.org was built by social media expert, James Samuel, with this kind of collaboration in mind.

"Theres a real need for transformative change across all aspects of our society and people are responding to that need," says Mr Henry. "Our participants tend to be from business, local government or professional sectors, and most study part-time to apply the principles of sustainable practice to their particular situation. This makes for fascinating projects that have relevance to all sorts of people."

The Centre for Sustainable Practice was established by Otago Polytechnic in 2008 to facilitate transformational change in students, businesses, professions and organisations. Over the past two years, its graduate programmes have grown exponentially with numbers expected to double again for 2013.

Current projects hosted at http://www.sustainable-practice.org include the Hawea Flat Food Forest, Trash Footwear, and Bushland Park, a lodge on the Coromandel Peninsula.

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Inspirational projects publicly accessible at new web home

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