Most recent update to the site: Home page on Feb 20, 2012
Drop Down Menu
Tell us what you think of our website!
Members Signin

User ID:

Password:

Remember ID
Remember password

Forgot your password?
Create a member account


Buy Local! Buy Fresh!






Pictorial: How the world eats

Transition Guelph
Working Groups
Groups with upcoming events or active projects are shown in bold

Colour legend:

Active  Starting Up
On Hold  Inactive

Household Resilience Working Group
Urban Food Working Group
Appleseed Collective
Resilience 2012 Planning
Heart and Soul Group
Community Engagement Group
Steering Committee
Skills Inventory Group
Urban Chicken Co-op
Local Economy Group
Permablitz Group
Transportation Group
Alternative Building and Retrofit Group
City as Ecosystem Group
U of G Students
The Treemobile
Resilience 2012
Intentional Community Group
Healthcare Transition Group
Energy Group
Community Engagement
Neighbourhood Groups Group
Education Group
Youth Transition Guelph

The Video Page

Transition Orientation - Part One

An introduction to the challenges or peak oil, climate change and economic instability facing our global community, how the Transition Initiative movement addresses these issues, and an overview of the work being done by Transition Guelph. Divided into two parts, each being about 12 minutes long.


Transition Orientation - Part Two

An introduction to the challenges or peak oil, climate change and economic instability facing our global community, how the Transition Initiative movement addresses these issues, and an overview of the work being done by Transition Guelph. Divided into two parts, each being about 12 minutes long.


Rob Hopkins Video Greeting

This is Rob Hopkins' video greeting to Transition Guelph on the occasion of our "great unleashing" event, the Resilience 2011 Community Festival. It strikes just the right note, I think. Funny, informative, and encouraging. Well worth a look!


Seeds of Progress

Watch the full episode. See more Need To Know.

Great PBS video segment about how residents of Detroit are revitalizing their communities by developing urban agriculture. In the past 10 years, nearly a third of the population of the city has fled, leaving abandoned houses, factories, warehouses and fields in their wake. These citizens are taking these abandoned places and building thriving urban farming communities.




More videos are coming soon.

If you happen upon any videos that you think would be appropriate to include here, why not let us know at admin@transitionguelph.org? Thanks!



From Oil Dependency to Local Resilience