3.10.2 Sunrise Village, Containertopia, 37MLK (near Mom's House).3.10 Oakland: direct action, & city co-option, opposition, embrace.3.9.1 Occupy Movement, & related villages, eg OM Village.3.9 Camps as protest initiatives and organizing sites.3.8 Nomadism, poverty, disaffiliation: Hobo camps, Hoovervilles.3.7 Revival meetings, Chautauqua, Burning Man.3.6 Wartime worker, detainee, refugee camps/housing.3.4 Emergency housing - e.g San Francisco "Earthquake Cottages" 1906.3.3 Military camps, & town foundings (e.g.3.2 Settlement, squatting, direct action, occupation, land struggles.3.1 Villages often grow from, are viewed as, or have many properties of camps.3 (3) Camps: places of transition, creation, settlement, marginality, exclusion.2 (2) A tale of two villages: Safe Sleeping Village, SF, and Emerald Village, Eugene.1 (1) Introduction / background / goals.Prefatory quote ideas: see main article: Prefatory quote ideas. Village Buildings bibliography, Homeless encampments, Emergency housing, and articles on specific village projects). Also, this is drafting and publishing space for topic discussions, which are further developed as free-standing articles as they develop in response to interest and need. This page is an evolving book outline and partial draft converging ground for notes and other materials collected and collecting elsewhere, such as in the Village Collaborative group, wiki platform, and comments and discussion in various other fora. Village Buildings: West Coast housing from the bottom up.Ī community-developed book exploring radical & low-cost "bottom-up" housing strategies, from land occupation to camps, to villages for the houseless, to cottage clusters and bungalow courts to affordable and redeployable accessory dwellings, to community land trusts and housing cooperatives.īy Tim McCormick and the Village Collaborative project of SquareOne Villages, Eugene, Oregon.