What is Permaculture?
Chapter 1. What is Permaculture?
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Permaculture is a multidisciplinary design system that addresses water, food, and shelter by recognizing interconnections in nature, and it can be understood through a four-part decision-making framework: topography, sectors, zones, and principles.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- What Permaculture is: a design process informed by multiple fields of study that creates systems for water, food, and shelter.
- Why it's hard to define: Permaculture is multidisciplinary and multi-faceted, making it dynamic but difficult to pin down.
- How to approach design: the Permaculture Decision-Making Matrix consolidates the design process into four distinct parts—topography, sectors, zones, and principles.
- Key concept—systems thinking: a system is "a set of connected things or parts forming a complex whole," so water design considers interconnections with soils, trees, water tables, atmosphere, and wildlife.
- Common confusion: Permaculture is not just one technique or field; it integrates many influences and produces many outputs, modeled after how nature works.
🌱 Defining Permaculture
🌱 The word and its origins
- The excerpt directs learners to a video that defines Permaculture and discusses its origins.
- Bill Mollison is referenced as Permaculture's co-founder; an interview with him about the definition is available in the featured links.
- The definition emphasizes designing systems for essential human needs: water, food, and shelter.
🔗 Systems thinking in Permaculture
A system is defined as "a set of connected things or parts forming a complex whole."
- Permaculture design recognizes interconnections rather than isolated elements.
- Example: designing for water on a site means considering its connections with soils, trees, water tables, the atmosphere, and wildlife—not just pipes or tanks.
- This systems approach applies to all aspects of Permaculture design.
🏗️ The Permaculture design process
🏗️ Multidisciplinary foundations
- Permaculture is informed by a wide array of influences from multiple fields of study.
- The excerpt mentions David Holmgren's Permaculture Flower, a diagram that illustrates these diverse influences.
- Because Permaculture draws from many disciplines, it produces many different outputs and applications.
🌳 Nature as the model
- The excerpt notes that analogies to a tree appear throughout the book.
- Why trees? The form of a tree provides many opportunities to understand how nature works and how Permaculture design is modeled after nature.
- The design system itself mirrors natural patterns and processes.
🔄 Dynamic but difficult to define
- The multidisciplinary and multi-faceted nature makes Permaculture very dynamic.
- This same complexity also makes it hard to define in a single sentence or framework.
- Don't confuse: Permaculture is not vague—it has clear methods—but its breadth means no single definition captures everything.
🧭 The four-part decision-making matrix
🧭 Consolidating the design process
- The Permaculture Decision-Making Matrix breaks the design process into four distinct parts:
- Topography
- Sectors
- Zones
- Principles
- These four topics form the major structure of the introductory book.
🛠️ Origins and purpose of the matrix
- The term and structure were coined by Andrew Millison.
- However, it represents a repackaging of the Permaculture design process explained by Bill Mollison and many other teachers and practitioners—not a new invention.
- Purpose: the matrix is useful as a basic outline of the main tools used in Permaculture design, making the process more accessible.
📚 How the matrix relates to traditional Permaculture teaching
- The decision-making matrix does not replace traditional Permaculture teaching; it organizes existing concepts.
- It serves as a decision-making tool to help designers systematically consider all relevant factors.
- Example: when planning a site, a designer would work through topography (land features), sectors (external energies), zones (intensity of use), and principles (design guidelines) to make informed choices.
👥 The people behind Permaculture
👥 Key contributors
- The excerpt lists several individuals who have made significant contributions to Permaculture over many years, including:
- Bill Mollison (co-founder)
- David Holmgren (co-founder)
- Robyn Francis, Rosemary Morrow, Narsanna Koppula, Penny Livingston-Stark, Geoff Lawton, Maddy Harland, Mark Lakeman, Starhawk, Eugenio Gras, Alias Mulambo, Roberto Perez, Julious Piti, Patrick Whitefield, and Masanobu Fukuoka
- The excerpt notes this is not an exhaustive list but highlights those with long-term, significant contributions.
- Links are provided to learn more about each person's work and organizations.