Frequently asked questions

What is cohousing ?

Where are Cohousing communities located ?

How are decisions made ?

 

Where is Liberty Village ?

Where can I find out more ?

 

What is Cohousing?

Cohousing is a very old, very traditional way of living that, regrettably, we have almost lost in modern America. But the values of community, and of knowing your neighbors, are apparent to those who embrace cohousing - which is just a name for the concept of living in a close, friendly and sharing neighborhood. These small-scale neighborhoods blend private home ownership with shared common resources. In this way, cohousing reinvents and reinterprets "The Village Green" for 21st century communities.

In cohousing communities, private self-sufficient homes are clustered around a "common house" with shared facilities such as a playroom for children, workshops, guest rooms, sitting areas and a dining area. Future residents design and develop their own community and are then responsible for its ongoing management. Having major participation from conception to birth, a cohousing community is a community long before the first key turns in the door.

A central feature of creating community in cohousing is "breaking bread" together. Generally, dinners cooked by the residents are available in the common house for those who wish to eat together. Depending on the community, once or twice a month residents volunteer to cook dinner or clean up. For all other evenings, when you get home from work you can socialize, play with your children or just relax. In an era where "neighbor knowing neighbor" is the chief deterrent to crime, cohousing above all else, is a safe place for adults and children to live and grow.

In addition to the obvious social advantages of living near friends, residents have more free time because many of the routine activities of life can be shared such as dinners, gardens and yard work. Expensive and/or rarely used tools and recreational equipment purchased by the group can be available to all. Car-pooling is easier to arrange.

There are four distinguishing characteristics of cohousing:

  • Residents participate in the planning and design of their community.
  • The physical design encourages incidental, frequent contact with community members thereby increasing a sense of community.
  • There are extensive shared facilities most notably the "Common House" which is designed for daily use and supplements private living areas.
  • Residents take complete responsibility for organizing and managing the community. One remarkable feature of cohousing communities is the "Purposeful Separation of the Car" (Chris Hanson in The Cohousing Handbook). In cohousing communities, cars are parked on the periphery of the community leaving the interior walks for people. Kids in cohousing can "play in the street" all day long without danger.

 

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Where are Cohousing communities located ?

There are currently more than 100 thriving cohousing communities in Europe. Closer to home, in the U.S. and Canada, as of September 2004, there are 189 recognized cohousing communities in various form of development: 76 are built communities, 22 are under construction, 8 are retrofitting cohousing into older neighborhoods, 17 more have a site, 19 are organized and seeking a site, and at least 43 new groups are in formation.


 
   

How are decisions made ?

Cohousing communities are strongly cooperative in nature. Often, consensus decision-making is the norm. Cohousing communities are designed so that they will give parents, children, single adults and elders more opportunities for social contact and support, while fully-equipped private dwellings will guarantee all the privacy residents may desire. Cohousing is the lifestyle of choice for people who want this new kind of balance between personal privacy and community.


 

Maps

 

Where is Liberty Village ?

Maryland's first cohousing community is located on the edge of Libertytown at the intersection of Maryland Route 26 & Maryland Route 31, on a beautiful, partially wooded 23 acre site, south and westerly sloping, with lovely views and a charming semi-rural atmosphere. The Libertytown location, just 10 miles east of Frederick, combines the pleasures and advantages of rural living with the ease of access to the major cities of Baltimore and Washington The site is located on part of what was once Pride and Joy Farm. Our site is about 23 acres, with about 15 acres left undeveloped as open space, either to dream about or to go and dream in. Adjacent to our site, but shielded by mature trees, is the original Manor House, a registered Frederick County historic landmark, built in 1753.


 

 

Where can I find out more ?

Here is a page of links to cohousing resources and communities.


 

Page last modified January 13, 2006