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Sustainability

Building the most sustainable, climate-resilient city in America

The California Forever plan proposes a compact, walkable city powered by renewable energy. Planned to maximize livability and minimize impact, the city is designed to be the most sustainable of its scale in America—with the potential to have the lowest per-capita carbon emissions of any developed place.

 

Today, too many urban spaces remain no- or low-walking ones, and demand for walkable places far outstrips supply. That is because walkable cities are easier and more attractive to live in, making for happier, healthier citizens. Health, prosperity, and sustainability go hand in hand.

– Project Drawdown, a leading source for climate solutions

 

Choosing a resilient site

By design, the new city will offer a climate refuge. Its location is ideal from the perspective of climate resiliency — out of the path of sea level rise, flooding, forest fires, and major seismic risks such as faulting and liquefaction.

Sea level rise

The new city is entirely out of the way of sea level rise projected through the year 2150 in the state’s moderately aggressive scenario. The only exceptions are open spaces along the northeastern edge of the new city – but even those, the plan intends to elevate above 2150 levels by raising the grade before construction.

Fires

Unlike other parts of the region and the western side of Solano County, southeastern Solano County is not in a high or very high fire hazard severity zone.

The site’s low vegetation means that, while grass fires may occur, forest fires are unlikely. It also means building the new city does not exacerbate high-intensity forest land wildfire ignition risks by creating new wildland-urban interfaces (WUI) affecting forested areas.

In addition, the new city will be built to the most protective and latest building code standards, including fire safety requirements for structures and for planned communities. A recent study of California’s most destructive fires showed that over 98.5% of burned or damaged homes were built prior to the adoption of current building code standards. According to the state’s former fire marshal, fire risks for master- planned communities are very low, and none have suffered any significant loss since existing fire safety standards were adopted.

The new city will be fire-hardened, with homes built of ignition-resistant materials, good fire access, and evacuation routes, good water supply, residential fire sprinklers, undergrounded utilities, strong defensible space, green belting with slope and ridge reductions to minimize fire spread, landscaping and fire-resistant plant species restrictions, and regular maintenance for all the fire safety provisions. The plan will also add new fire stations, fire equipment, and more firefighters to provide for more rapid initial fire response in areas where no such services presently exist.

Finally, our leases currently require our local tenants to maintain fire breaks, and we will continue this practice going forward for areas outside of the new city.

Flooding

The site is not within a projected flood hazard zone even if severe rainfall from a one-in-100-year weather event should occur. The project will use state-of-the-art flood management approaches to control potential risks along drainages within the site.

Compact growth = lower environmental impact

The new city’s plan puts every resident within walking distance of a great local shopping street, parks, and schools. This design for proximity makes it easy to socialize, learn, work, and play minutes from home, reducing the need for long commutes. It leverages a grid that prioritizes active and shared mobility.

Homes and amenities will be in close proximity, and every resident will live ten minutes walking (or closer) to a quality public transit route. This compact design means less open land needs to be developed than otherwise would be with conventional car-dependent subdivisions.

Enabling transit, biking, and walking

The new city is intended to have a minimum of 20 dwelling units per acre (a density similar to San Francisco) in residential areas. Density is fundamental to the project’s sustainability – it minimizes the environmental footprint of the land.

The design is also expected to achieve far higher rates of walking, biking, and transit use than most places where we are building (mostly car-dependent subdivisions) in the US, by making them the quickest, cheapest, and most convenient transportation options. This maximizes grid efficiency and gets residents where they need without compromising safety, health, or livability.

Investing in clean energy

The new city’s energy grid is expected to rely on both locally and regionally generated clean power, including both solar and wind.

Battery storage would balance energy uses – during low demand periods, clean energy can be stored for later use, when demands peaks or the sun isn’t shining. Batteries can also offer backup power during outages, increasing reliability.

The new city can also use a clean thermal energy grid to reduce fossil fuel reliance and elevate efficiency. District thermal energy systems can distribute thermal energy to buildings from centralized or distributed sources, providing space heating, cooling, and domestic hot water heating. Most homes would use little if any natural gas, which is unprecedented for US residential developments of this scale.

This enables affordable electrification by allowing the new city to tap into clean resources at scale. For example, with geoexchange, we can use the earth as a thermal battery to store heat, extracting the heat when needed using underground pipes connected to buildings and a heat exchanger, providing a more effective way to leverage renewable energy. One source of heat will be waste heat – from data centers, for example.

District thermal systems hold great potential to efficiently and cost-effectively integrate low-carbon energy sources, according to the International Energy Agency. We will also construct highly efficient buildings and energy systems to achieve low per-capita energy use, which will help keep energy bills low.

Incorporating circular economy

Building a new city presents a unique opportunity to create efficient, self-sustaining systems that reuse spent resources from one process to become beneficial inputs into another process.

California Forever is evaluating pneumatic tube systems that transport trash to central collection points using air pressure for seamless, low-carbon waste disposal. Pneumatic disposal reduces the need for garbage trucks, as well as the traffic congestion, noise, and emissions associated with them. Enclosed underground pipes transport waste directly from buildings and collection hubs, minimizing risk of the spills, pests, or smells that can otherwise make streets unhygienic, and elevating the appeal of serviced neighborhoods.

Pneumatic waste inlets in the village of Llinars del Vallès, northeast of Barcelona. Photo © CC BY 3.0.

Pneumatic waste systems also improve recycling rates and sorting accuracy. Chutes collect trash by waste type at point-of-disposal, and a centralized sorting facility uses advanced sorting technologies to separate recyclables. Separated organics can undergo anaerobic digestion, or a similar renewable fuel generation process, to heat the central thermal systems servicing buildings. This system has been implemented in cities like Barcelona and Stockholm, and is globally lauded for minimizing the amount of waste sent to landfills and creating a new source of clean energy.

The new city will also build efficient water recycling systems. This enables the reuse of appropriately treated residential wastewater for non-potable uses, like irrigation of landscaping, certain industrial uses, and irrigation of nearby agricultural properties. By shifting agricultural lands to use recycled water, the clean surface water resources attached to those parcels can serve residential uses while sustaining irrigated agriculture. Recycling essentially creates a new, sustainable, and highly reliable source of water that grows with your city.

By investing in circular systems that repurpose spent resources for beneficial uses, the new city can minimize environmental impact and serve as a global model for self-sustaining cities.

Bringing nature into the city

The plan incorporates pocket parks, plazas, large city parks, community gardens, trails, and open space preserves as an integral part of the new city. The plan anticipates ten or more acres of open space per 1,000 people – more than any city in Solano County. San Francisco, whose 1,017-acre Golden Gate Park spans an area greater than New York’s Central Park, offers less than that, even if you include the city’s private golf courses in the equation.

This provides habitat value, improves local climate, and reduces pollution. In addition, the new city will deploy green infrastructure for stormwater management, which improves water quality, reduces impacts of downstream flows, and promotes replenishment of groundwater supplies.

The plan proposes many open spaces within and around the new city.

Conclusion

For everyone who cares about the environment, this plan shows the way forward for how to accommodate human population in a way that is sustainable. The plan’s compact growth clusters development to enable walkability and make efficient use of the land. The plan’s excellent public transit and biking will minimize car trips. The new city will be 100% powered by clean energy. Infrastructure systems will recycle water, heat, and organics – turning waste into resources. The new city will have the lowest per-capita greenhouse gas emissions in the United States.

And finally, it will be a refuge from the impacts of climate change, providing a place for hundreds of thousands of people to live safe from forest fires and sea level rise.

All human settlements have impacts. But compared to any other place we can imagine people living, this is a model for how people can live sustainably on the earth.


Support from local community

California Forever is a game-changer for local restaurants and small businesses. By promoting housing, employment, and clean energy, we’re laying the groundwork for a resilient society where businesses can excel. This initiative is about pragmatic growth for local entrepreneurs to prosper, as well as the importance of raising a family in a safe community.

Monique and Paul Feybesse Vallejo, CA Chefs and Owners of Tarts de Feybesse

Rome wasn’t built in one day, this new city will be historical for many and…

Jonnathan Obando Fairfield, CA

Rome wasn’t built in one day, this new city will be historical for many and create opportunities for those willing to pursue it.

Jonnathan Obando Fairfield, CA

I believe in growth, and therefore acknowledge the economic benefits and new businesses California Forever aims to bring to Solano.

Enrique Quiles Fairfield, CA

Anything for the better, I support!

Jacqueline Atienza Rio Vista

Anything for the better, I support!

Jacqueline Atienza Rio Vista Medical professional

I support the plans for the new city development because it will boost local jobs and create new job opportunities within the county. I have children and it would be great to see that when they get ready for the workforce, they will have a chance to remain within the local job market if they choose to.

Deltrina M. Vallejo, CA Local & Small Business Owner, 5 Counties Mobile Notary

As a new resident of Rio Vista, I’m very excited about the new parks, especially.

Bill La Commare Rio Vista, CA Sales

Solano County has been boring for decades. Glad to see California Forever has such a grand vision and plan to build something great for generations to enjoy.

Ukyo Duong Vallejo, CA Engineer

I strongly support this project. If we work together, we can make this a better community for all!

Kathryn Thompson Suisun City, CA

I was raised in Solano County and support the opportunity to build not just a…

Leah Quezon Vallejo, CA

I was raised in Solano County and support the opportunity to build not just a city, but one of true community and culture.

Leah Quezon Vallejo, CA Program Manager, Kaiser

I want my kids and grandkids to share in some of the opportunities I had.

John Spinola Benicia

I want my kids and grandkids to share in some of the opportunities I had.

John Spinola Benicia Retired Ironworker

I’m excited for this opportunity and the eco and solar components as well.

Sanyade Baruti Vallejo, CA

I’m excited for this opportunity and the eco and solar components as well.

Sanyade Baruti Vallejo, CA Small Business Owner

My family has lived in Fairfield for three generations, and yet there’s a real possibility that I will never be able to buy a home here. I love the vision of a walkable, sustainable community powered by renewable energy with homes for all ages and income levels.

Natalie Neal Fairfield, CA Finance

I will vote yes! Absolutely and BIG YES!

Clarita Marquez Vallejo, CA

I will vote yes! Absolutely and BIG YES!

Clarita Marquez Vallejo, CA Medical Professional

I am in support of this groundbreaking project, as it promises not only to bring a much-needed economic boost through job creation and financial investment but also stands as a beacon of innovative thinking. This initiative is a breath of fresh air, demonstrating a forward-thinking, out-of-the-box approach that has the potential to transform our community. It’s an opportunity to set a new standard in urban development, blending economic growth with creative urban planning.

George Theodoris Vallejo, CA

I’ve commuted two hours daily to work for 25 years. I want my kids to stay in the county, and the only way they’ll be able to remain in the Bay Area is if there are good opportunities in Solano County. I support the plan to build a new city with new job opportunities for everyone.

Jojo Cruz Vallejo, CA Radiologic Technologist Supervisor

Me gustari la nueva cuidad para beneficio de todos, notendriamos que salir abuscar trabajo tan…

Pedro Herrera Rio Vista, CA

Me gustari la nueva cuidad para beneficio de todos, notendriamos que salir abuscar trabajo tan lejos y nos daria tiempo para aser muchas cosas. Mi nombre es Pedro y a mi me encantaria que se bulba realidad.

Pedro Herrera Rio Vista, CA

As a young(ish) professional returning to my hometown after living in Chicago for the last 5 years, I was disheartened to find a lack of opportunities and amenities in Solano County, including significant barriers to home ownership. I truly believe that California Forever can offer those opportunities and more. I am excited to see what this future holds for all of us.

Courtney Prado, Esq. Vacaville, CA Attorney

As someone looking for a new start for my family and me, it’s been difficult to find decent housing in Solano County. We’re looking forward to new housing opportunities soon, through California Forever.

Bruno Torres Fairfield, CA Automotive Technician

As someone who enjoys biking, I look forward to supporting a new community that prioritizes slow and safe streets along with new biking and walking paths.

Devon Miller Vacaville, CA Small Business Owner

I think it’s a great opportunity for young adults and families to purchase their first…

Maxwell Hampton Vallejo, CA

I think it’s a great opportunity for young adults and families to purchase their first homes.

Maxwell Hampton Vallejo, CA Civil Engineer

I support California Forever

I believe in Solano County and California that build again. Let’s build new industries, affordable homes, and clean energy for this generation and generations to come.