Right now I'm working a business venture fulltime. FI is within sight, and since it is likely to cross the finish line with cashflow 'momentum' I'm likely to have surplus income. I've been inspired by the stories of Loomis and Voscovo, people who made a pile of money dong something boring and then deployed that money on ventures that mattered to them (RnD Laboratory to help beat the Nazis for Loomies; deep sea expeditions #forscience and other projects for Voscovo).
I'll still cautiously intrigued by the idea of 'ventureERE', which I loosely define as a WL7+ individual deploying surplus cash and other forms of capital towards an ERE-minded stoke-directed venture at the larger-than-household scale. I do see risks inherent in the idea. However, it's worth pointing out that we've already got at least one example of successful ventureERE: mountainFrugal's art studio system/WoRgame.
Anyway, my post-FI freedom-to vision goes something like "a solarpunk design/build studio, starting with just me doing my thing but soon incorporating collaborations with other makers/designers/builders/organizers and potentially sprouting into an organization of some sort". One form it could take is a Solarpunk Makerbase. Something along these lines is a concept that I noodle around with as I'm finishing up the "solve money forever" phase of my life.
The Concept
An idea that came out of my various noodlings about an ERE Solarpunk Makerbase is the idea of an Emergent Renaissance Ecology Community Hub, or ERECH (pronounce it ee-wreck).
The purpose of an ERECH could be said to lower the cost of living for the people directly and indirectly involved in it via cultivating a culture and infrastructure of voluntary simplicity, regenerative skill, and individual *and* community resilience.
Depending on the flavor of ERECH it would spend more or less time on
- education/workshops/training/co-learning (how to eat for 150usd/mo; how to personal finance; how to sew; how to install a window; how to fix a bike; etc),
- building stuff (today we're making composting toilets/solar showers/raised beds/DIY room air purifiers/Energy Recovery Ventilators from scrap metal/installing off-grid microPV systems/etc),
- doing stuff (potluck, hike, workout, choir, music, road cleanup/trail maintenance, elders home visits, disaster prep/relief/aid, put on a festival, etc).
I could also see some going more towards makerbase or even workshop/business: a small crew of people start cranking out, idk, solar shower kits and selling them and all of a sudden they've got a cottage industry on their hands. Maybe they form an LLC or a co-op. Maybe a more community focused group gets involved and scales up and forms a non-profit org. Most probably aren't any kind of entity, they're just a loose group of people doing their thing.
Each would almost certainly start as one person in their garage/living room/backyard inviting friends over. Some of them might grow to the point they need their own infrastructure/building/etc. Think about how mountainFrugal's thing started as two dudes meeting at a pub to draw (drink n draw) and is now housed in brick n mortar and integrated into the local community.
Similarly to mF's thing, a big focus would be on *usefulness to people*, which is what I was pointing at with the purpose being "to lower cost of living" although perhaps that needs to be dropped explicitly because not terribly sexi.
This isn't a new idea: lots of entities like this already exist in various flavors (and things like this have been discussed here on the forum before). I'm just trying to think through a pattern (pattern of patterns) that might fit the ERE ethos. Something like this idea is a pattern I'm going to be working with as my time begins to free up over the next couple of years.
A couple notes:
- In my mind, an ERECH is not a card-carrying-EREmite-only club. All are welcome.
- Call it whatever you want.
- An ERECH wouldn't necessarily need any money to operate, certainly not to start. But if one wants to go the direction of a cottage industry or small business operation for example, it might. That's the connection to my 'ventureERE' idea/surplus cash deployment notions.