
thumb|Sieben Linden Ecovillage thumb|right|An Green building|eco-house at [[Findhorn Ecovillage with a turf roof and solar panels]] thumb|Tallebudgera Mountain and a vegetable garden at the Currumbin Ecovillage in Queensland, 2015
thumb|Sieben Linden Ecovillage thumb|right|An Green building|eco-house at [[Findhorn Ecovillage with a turf roof and solar panels]] thumb|Tallebudgera Mountain and a vegetable garden at the Currumbin Ecovillage in Queensland, 2015
An ecovillage is a traditional or intentional community that aims to become more socially, culturally, economically and/or environmentally sustainable. An ecovillage strives to have the least possible negative impact on the natural environment through the intentional physical design and behavioural choices of its inhabitants. It is consciously designed through locally owned, participatory processes to regenerate and restore its social and natural environments. Most range from a population of 50 to 250 individuals, although some are smaller, and traditional ecovillages are often much larger. Larger ecovillages often exist as networks of smaller sub-communities. Some ecovillages have grown through like-minded individuals, families, or other small groups—who are not members, at least at the outset—settling on the ecovillage's periphery and participating de facto in the community. There are currently more than 10,000 ecovillages around the world.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).