We already published a brief post on our cargo bike event from 23rd September 2023. Here’s an update for you: more photos, video footage and an explainer by the Cargo Bike Movement.
Tag: community
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Forwards with Cargo Bikes!
To cargo or not to cargo? Our cargo bike event, organised by BANZAI and the Cargo Bike Movement, turned out to be brilliant. On the afternoon of Saturday September 23rd, over 80 adults and children made their way to Bruntsfield’s Montpelier to try out a cargo bike.
Most people had never sat on a cargo bike before. There was apprehension at first. How to steer such a monstrous beast? It turned out to not be too difficult despite having to make U-turns on a narrow street. The pedal-assist electric motor gives you the power to comfortably master any hill, even with a heavy load. The end result was smiles all around and the kids loved being cargoed.
People would love to borrow a cargo bike if it were freely available. Guess what, they are! The Cargo Bike Movement will generously lend you one for free. Why don’t most people take up the offer? The sticking point is where to store these big machines.
So, to all City of Edinburgh Councillors and local politicians: please sort out cargo bike storage, as they are a fantastic way to move around the city, and families love them! Plus, it will help Edinburgh meet its ambitious net zero targets in the process.
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BANZAI Cargo Bike Community Event
Have you ever wondered what it is like to ride a cargo bike? Now is your chance! Come along to the Bruntsfield cargo bike event on Saturday 23rd September, 2.00 pm – 5.00 pm — organised by BANZAI in collaboration with Cargo Bike Movement.
There will be something for all ages:
- Stalls from local groups such as Dig In Community Greengrocer, Edinburgh Critical Mass, Spokes and Love to Ride;
- Dr Bike: a free health check for your bike provided by The Bike Station (2.00 pm – 4.00 pm);
- Arts & crafts, a smoothie bike, and face painting for kids; and
- Cakes and music.
The event will take place on Montpelier (EH10 NA), just in front of Bruntsfield Primary School.
Everyone welcome, young and old!
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Community climate action and alphabet soup
There has been a considerable drive towards community-led climate action over the last couple of years. This has resulted in a good number of local groups being formed but also led to confusion and overlaps at the higher level where local and national governments want to support community initiatives. Within Edinburgh, we have been puzzling over the relationship between two organisations established by the council and by national government to help with community climate action.
The City of Edinburgh Council (CEC) helped fund the creation of an organisation run by EVOC (Edinburgh Voluntary Organisations Council) with a name that has varied a little over the last year, but which has now settled (I think) as Edinburgh Communities Climate Forum (ECCF). CEC’s interest was primarily to provide an interface and support to the community action aspects of its 2030 Climate Strategy.
In parallel, the Scottish Government has commissioned the Scottish Communities Climate Action Network (SSCAN) to set up a nationwide pool of community Climate Action Networks, intended as the first step towards Climate Action Hubs that will underpin a strategic, regional approach to climate action across Scotland. And so Edinburgh Climate Action Network (ECAN) has been born.
Initially, the existence of ECCF and ECAN in Edinburgh caused a fair amount of confusion: were they overlapping (and thus potentially competing) or complementary? Agreement has finally been reached and the coordinators of the two organisations are now working together. The following summary was recently put out by ECAN:
The Forum and Network share the goal of supporting community-led climate action, however the Forum’s remit is more specific than the Network’s. The Forum is primarily council-facing, and aims to support community groups to achieve the goals outlined in existing public policy strategies [e.g. the CEC 2030 Climate Strategy]. The Forum will hold events and offer resources, but will not have a membership.
The Network aims to support community groups in whichever strategy and direction is the priority for Edinburgh communities — any community group can be part of the Network and influence the specific goals of the Network. Community groups can then also define how the Network will relate to the Forum, depending on how much the Network feels the Forum’s strategy aligns with communities’ priorities. To summarise, [ECAN] is a broad commons, into which [ECCF] will feed, and through which [ECCF] will be able to widen its reach.OK?! We hope that we’re now entering a period of much more effective support for local groups such as BANZAI, and opportunities to influence both local and national government.
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The Bruntsfield street banding together
It’s a sunny Saturday morning in Edinburgh, the weekend of the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee. But the residents of Leamington Terrace aren’t in the street celebrating her majesty’s 70 year reign. Instead, ten or so residents of Leamington Terrace are out with brushes and dustpans cleaning up the pavements. I ask around for Ewan Klein a founding member of the Bruntsfield Area Net Zero Action Initiative, BANZAI.
“We already are experiencing climate change, it’s just affecting people in the developing world more” Ewan says. But having lived on the street for decades he is beginning to notice signs of the climate crisis arriving on his doorstep too. “We have had instances of bad flooding” he tells me, which affected the new builds at the end of the street last summer. Mick Patrick, another founding member, is noticing these things too. The damp and drainage issues in his flat are a result of guttering designed for a climate that’s already in the past, he was told by conservation architects. “We get heavier bursts of more intense rain now” he tells me. The guttering, designed a hundred years ago for the B-listed tenements that make up much of Bruntsfield, is “being overwhelmed more often”. According to Scottish Government annual average rainfall figures, Scotland has become 9% wetter in the last decade alone, with winters 19% wetter than the 1961–1990 average.
As I’m talking to Ewan, Mick is speed-walking away with a bag full of placards. It’s almost 11 am, time to #SitForClimate. For the second week in a row a handful of BANZAI members and Tara the dog head to Bruntsfield Links and sit on a bench for 10 minutes holding #SitForClimate placards. Mick discovered Sit For Climate on Twitter. “The idea is just to do something which is very simple, very non-confrontational, very un-stressful,” he explains. Friends and family members stop by to sit or chat for a couple of minutes and a passer-by asks about what they’re doing.
“I feel like I’ve got to do something,” Mick tells me. He’s “surrounded by all these nice people in a nice street but why aren’t we talking about climate stuff and why aren’t we changing things? If we just wait for the council to change things for us we’ll probably wait too long”. Ewan points out that “there may be some areas where the council’s ahead of public opinion and we need to be part of talking in support of some of those measures”. Mick agrees, he’s been following the City of Edinburgh Council’s Net Zero action plans closely. He hopes BANZAI could become one of the Council’s proposed Net Zero Neighbourhoods, pioneering the changes needed to reach the Scottish Government’s Net Zero target. “I’m quite distressed about the way the world is going, life kind of goes on nicely but things are pretty bad,” Mick tells me.
He’s not alone in his distress. This week the World Health Organisation published a new policy brief with five recommendations urging countries to rapidly integrate mental health support with action on the Climate Crisis. “A lot of people take action in a slightly disconnected way or lots of people find it difficult to take action because the feelings that are associated with climate change are so overwhelming,” says Mimo Caenepeel, she’s also sitting for climate. A trained psychotherapist, she’s been co-facilitating a Climate Cafe at the Eric Liddell Centre around the corner — a safe place for people to bring their feelings about the Climate Emergency. “It’s not easy,” she says “they are very big feelings”. “It’s not about reaching as many people as possible but about building a strong core where we kind of approach it in some ways more holistically”, she says. It’s not quite group therapy, once people start to talk about their feelings “it naturally does start to connect with what is out there, what can we do, so we have a bit of a hybrid format,” she explains.
“We’re just trying to do something in this big soup of stuff that’s going on, and hopefully we’ll gel together in the right way and the most effective way in the next year or so, but nobody feels like there’s time to just kind of hang around and wait for the structure to exist,” says Mick. “Everybody feels the need to do something now”.
So what is BANZAI doing now? Mick has set up a hyperlocal closed loop car sharing group with HiyaCar, which takes care of insurance. He’s listed his own family’s car, and 40 people have expressed interest in being part of the scheme already. Mick hopes “more people will share cars if it’s just amongst their friends and neighbours” and that the scheme could help reduce the number of cars on the street. The group is also lobbying the council for more bike parking and access to electric vehicle charging points. The BANZAI website is full of residents’ garden rewilding efforts and there’s an information evening about home retrofitting planned for the 20th of June.
For now the group is trying to care for their immediate environment and build strong community links to improve resilience “if things do get harder” as Ewan fears. Leamington Terrace has its own annual street party, closing off the street every August. BANZAI began as a street swap stall at the street party cohosted by Ewan and Mick. The stall brought more people together, enough to form a group. They put on a film at the local church in the run-up to COP26. “We’ve tried to align the group with existing networks in the street,” says Ewan.
The Leamington Terrace area has an active mailing list, a Facebook group and a WhatsApp group started during Covid which “grew arms and legs” and now has close to 120 members. “Once that communication channel is there it does help people think, oh I can do stuff I can suggest things,” says Tai Kedzierski who maintains the email list. On Fridays residents leave donations for the local food bank on their doorsteps, to be collected by wheelbarrow, and roughly once a month there’s a street clean. They have even installed their own noticeboard, “it was trickier than you’d think” says Ewan. It’s a tight-knit community.
Has forming BANZAI made Ewan feel more hopeful? “I think we probably need to completely transform our dependence on carbon in the next five years, and I don’t think it’s going to happen,” he says. But forming the group has been “encouraging, there is an immediate kind of buzz and a sense of community”, it’s just “not on the timescale we need”.
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Home Energy and Retrofit Meeting, 20 June 2022
We will be holding a public meeting on the topic of Home Energy and Retrofit, 7.00 pm – 9.00 pm, Monday 20th June, at Bruntsfield Evangelical Church, 70 Leamington Terrace,=.
The Retrofit Challenge
Home energy and retrofit present major challenges, both for individuals and for society as a whole. This public meeting will focus on how to approach the task of retrofitting typical Edinburgh tenement flats and homes in order to increase their energy efficiency. On the plus side, fixing the problem of wasted heat will reduce bills and improve domestic comfort. It is also going to be crucial in realising the Council’s ambition of making Edinburgh a net zero city by 2030. On the other hand, retrofitting older buildings, especially tenements, requires money, good planning, and reliable, skilled contractors. So it is important that we gain as much information and insight as we can about the options open to us.
Finding the resources to change the fabric of our homes is daunting. This meeting will address topics such as:
- What retrofit measures can individuals take to improve energy efficiency in their homes?
- When does it make better sense to look at retrofitting groups of properties, for example in a whole tenement, rather than just on an individual level?
- How might we deal with the social and financial challenges of retrofit and low-carbon energy distribution at a communal level?
Meeting Schedule
We will start with brief presentations from three experts:
- Jo McClelland — architect with EALA Impacts, a social enterprise for sustainability in managing our built environment
- Calum Duncan — Calum Duncan Architects, locally-based RIAS Sustainable Building Design and RIBA Conservation accredited architect
- Cat Magill — Dark Matter Labs, a non-profit collaborating with communities to shape institutions and infrastructure in responding to the climate crisis
The talks will be followed by a refreshments break, a panel Q&A session and an opportunity for informal discussions in breakout groups. The panel of presenters will discuss how their different areas of interest align and address questions from attendees, both in the plenary session and in informal discussion time.