Carrying Capacity Community Engagement Report
Shaping our Future are holding two public workshops as the first step of enabling these conversations. We’re going to work on what is known as our ‘social carrying capacity’.
Shaping our Future are holding two public workshops as the first step of enabling these conversations. We’re going to work on what is known as our ‘social carrying capacity’.
A Central Otago couple creates the country’s first fossil-fuel-free cherry orchard, using electricity, solar power and an electric tractor.
Shaping our Future are holding two public workshops as the first step of enabling these conversations. We’re going to work on what is known as our ‘social carrying capacity’.
We invite you to join us for our Annual General Meeting 2023. Shaping our Future will report on our work over the last year and work underway to empower communities to describe and work towards their successful outcomes.
If we are ever going to address the concern that there is ‘too much’, we need to define and unpick what ‘too much’ means.
Is it simply a function of numbers, or maybe it’s the type and extent of impact?
Where do cultural behaviours fit into this?
If we can verbalise ‘too much’, we can work to find the Goldilocks ‘sweet spot’.
Old Cromwell – community engagement was undertaken with Cromwell residents to brainstorm the improvements they would like to see on the waterfront area between Butchers Drive and the Clutha and Kawerau River junction.
Luggate, a small rural roadside township on the fringe of Queenstown-Lakes – just a 12 minute drive from Wanaka. Luggate flies under the radar, so much so, that the last long-term vision was carried out in 2003!
Define your vision, determine your future. Expressing your opinion has the ability to shape the course of public matters.
Queenstown State Highway 6/6a roundabout is in the spotlight to receive some stop-go lights.