VIDEO

George Mitchell cheers unique housing development in Belfast

Posted Nov. 15, 2011, at 7:15 p.m.
Last modified Nov. 15, 2011, at 9:45 p.m.
Print this   E-mail this    Facebook this   Tweet this     
Former Sen. Geroge Mitchell speaks during the official ground breaking ceremony for the Belfast Cohousing and Ecovillage on Tuesday.
Former Sen. Geroge Mitchell speaks during the official ground breaking ceremony for the Belfast Cohousing and Ecovillage on Tuesday.
Joseph White, the owner of Maple Knoll Builders, works on one of the buildings at the Belfast Cohousing and Ecovillage on Tuesday. White was contracted to build two of the homes and they are slated to be finished in the late spring of next year.
Joseph White, the owner of Maple Knoll Builders, works on one of the buildings at the Belfast Cohousing and Ecovillage on Tuesday. White was contracted to build two of the homes and they are slated to be finished in the late spring of next year. Buy Photo

View Belfast Cohousing & Ecovillage in a larger map

BELFAST, Maine — Former U.S. Sen. George Mitchell grabbed a spade and dug right in Tuesday afternoon as the crowd attending a groundbreaking ceremony for the Belfast Cohousing & Ecovillage development erupted in cheers and whistles.

The moment has been a long time coming for the planned community, which began nearly five years ago.

“This project is unique in so many respects,” Mitchell said.

He ticked off ways that the 50-member, 42-acre community is different from typical housing developments, including its commitment to energy efficiency, its environmental concern and its “walkable” design. Mitchell said that while some may disagree that people need to work to fix real problems with the environment, he’s glad that the Belfast Cohousing members aren’t among them.

“The problem is so large and so vast in scope, there’s a tendency on the part of many individuals to say it’s too big for me to solve it,” he said. “We know it will take the combined efforts of millions and perhaps billions of people all over the world.”

Mitchell was joined in the groundbreaking by Belfast Cohousing members Pia Gibson, 8, and Mike Shannon, 76. Pia’s smile was the brightest thing on an overcast day as she threw a shovelful of rich soil onto the ground where the community’s common house will be built sometime over the next year.

When asked what her favorite part of co-housing is, she didn’t hesitate.

“Having my friends next door,” she said.

Her mother, Sanna McKim, is a co-founder of the group, and said that her daughter’s friends range in age from 1 to 76 years old, which is one of the attractive aspects of co-housing. She said she was glad to have the ceremony to mark a milestone for the group — finally building after years of planning.

“I’m thrilled to be able to build on the momentum of a bunch of really good design decisions,” she said.

Her husband, Alan Gibson, is a co-founder of the Belfast-based architecture and construction firm GO Logic, which is building the 36 energy-efficient houses which will make up the community.

The homes will be fitted with solar panels and in the middle of winter will require almost no supplemental heat, according to GO Logic. The houses are a selling point for the project, but new member Lindsay Verite of Camden said they weren’t what convinced her to sign up, along with her four young children.

“I have enthusiastically and with pride joined Belfast Cohousing,” she said at the ceremony. “Community is what I’ve bought. And the amazing, energy-efficient, well-thought-out house is a bonus.”

Work actually has begun on a few of the buildings, which are being framed out by construction workers before the ground freezes. The first residents are planning to move into their homes on May 15.

Margie Shannon, 75, who has been living off the grid in Knox for 22 years along with her husband, Mike Shannon, is among them. She said she is very excited to make the move.

“It’s the right thing to do,” she said, even though she’s scrambling to figure out where to put her collection of seven spinning wheels.

The view from her new place is expansive, encompassing a sweep of fields and forests. She was enthusiastic even though her house has yet to have walls and windows.

“It’s just going to be great,” she said. “Today, looking down at the house, I just had the urge to pick it up and hug it.”

The group is still seeking a few good members to join them and purchase homes, which have a base price range from $150,000 to $330,000, depending on size. In addition to their own houses, the members will share a common house with a big kitchen, 40 or so acres of land for farming, gardens, pathways and pasture, and the intentional community.

Many Belfast dignitaries came to the ceremony to lend their voices in the cheers that rose from the crowd. City Councilor Marina Delune was among them.

“It’s our goal to have Belfast be a very energy-efficient city, and this is thrilling,” she said afterward. “It’s something to be really proud of — and I think that this is the future of housing.”

Similar articles:

Marketplace News

Marketplace

Guidelines for posting on bangordailynews.com

The Bangor Daily News encourages comments about stories, but you must follow our terms of service.

In brief:

  1. Keep it civil and stay on topic
  2. No vulgarity, racial slurs, name-calling or personal attacks.
  3. People who harass others or joke about tragedies will be blocked.

The primary rule here is pretty simple: Treat others with the same respect you'd want for yourself. Here are some guidelines (see more):

  • Anonymous

    Who cares about George Mitchell?

  • tag

    So now apartment complexes or townhouse projects are called “cohousing” communities? This doesn’t seem much different from any of the low income housing projects in the area. My questions are: 1) how much taxpayer money went into this? 2) do you allow minorities to purchase homes? 3) what happens if one of your members decides to vote Republican? 

  • Tracy Gayton

    Cohousing communities differ substantially from apartment complexes or townhouse projects in that they are initiated and planned by the future residents. Most also provide for a common house, usually with cooking and other facilities that go beyond say, a condominium club-house. I am not affiliated with the Belfast Cohousing project, but it would be very unusual for taxpayers in any way to contribute to a cohousing project. They are private projects. Though frequently they have to battle against existing state and municipal regulations for the freedom to build close together on their private property. Most cohousers are interested in diversity and would be delighted to have minorities living there. They are subject to the same laws regarding equal opportunity housing as any other residential organization. And finally, the last I heard, we still have a secret ballot in the Great State of Maine!    

  • Anonymous

    To me, even $150k seems a bit steep when you consider house prices in Belfast continue to fall.

  • Jillian Brooks

    I’m living in cohousing right now and I love it,
    the main differences between cohousing and single-family housing
    is that I have neighbors that I know, cook with, drink wine with,
    spend hours on the patio talking about everything and nothing. 

    People who end up unhappy in their cohousing communities often
    didn’t have accurate expectations (or were not completely informed)
    going into it.  Set future residents of your cohousing up for success;
    give them a copy of Creating Cohousing:  Building Sustainable
    Communities by Kathryn McCamant and Charles Durrett. 

    Spread the word.
    Build it up.

    -Nevada City Cohousing

ADVERTISEMENT | Grow your business

Marketplace Coupons

ADVERTISEMENT | Grow your business