Brad Lancaster

Brad Lancaster

Brad Stewart Lancaster (born March 15, 1967) is an expert in the field of rainwater harvesting and water management. He is also a permaculture teacher, designer, consultant and co-founder of Desert Harvesters non-profit organization.

Lancaster lives on an eighth of an acre (0.05 Ha) in downtown Tucson, Arizona, where rainfall is less than 12 inches (305 mm) per annum. In such arid conditions, Brad consistently models that catching over 100,000 Gallons (379,000 Liters) of rainwater to feed food-bearing shade trees, abundant gardens, and a thriving landscape is a much more viable option than the municipal system of directing it into storm drains and sewer systems.[1]

A recent project in 2009 involved acting as a representative for the U.S. State Department on an educational tour in the Middle East.[2]

Lectures

Lancaster lectures at the ECOSA Institute, the University of Arizona, and Prescott College. He has been a guest speaker at the annual Bioneers Convergence; Green Festival USGBC’s Greenbuild Conference; Texas Natural Building Colloquium; the New Mexico Xeriscape Conference; the Green Festival; the 2009 Water Conservation & Xeriscaping EXPO; the New Mexico Organic Farming Conference and various Audubon Expeditions.

Design

Lancaster has designed integrated water-harvesting and permaculture systems for multiple projects, including the Tucson Audubon Simpson Farm restoration site; the Milagro development; Stone Curves co-housing project;[3] and the Tucson Nature Conservancy water-harvesting demonstration site.

Interviews

Books

Published Articles

Awards

Website

www.HarvestingRainwater.com

See Also

References

Footnotes

  1. Telis, Gisela."The Care and Watering of a Neighborhood"Tucson Green Magazine January 2008, p.13
  2. Khan, Fouzia (April 21, 2009). "American Speakers at Earth Day Celebrations". Saudi Gazette, P.3.
  3. Hamilton, James L., Stone Curves Development Manager, personal communication, February 10, 2010
  4. Poole, B. “Design With the Desert in Mind”, Tucson Citizen, March 2006, p.4A.
  5. Poole, B. “Design With the Desert in Mind”, Tucson Citizen, March 2006, p.4A.
  6. Poole, B. “Design With the Desert in Mind”, Tucson Citizen, March 2006, p.4A.
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