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Act I: The Genesis and the Shift to "Terravila Glocal"
Every resilient design is born from a crisis. In 2020, during the global pandemic lockdowns, E2GLATS (Experimental Glocal Station for Open Sciences & P2P Social Technologies, founded in 2014) activated a human, playful, and political counter-response: a 3D co-creative occupation in Salvaterra, Juiz de Fora/MG.
It was within this territory that our co-initializer, Braz, experienced a profound existential paradigm shift. Through daily contact with the soil, he recognized the biological urgency of reclaiming the ancestral gardener that we once were as a species, merging artistic expression with land stewardship into the identity of an Arte Floresteiro (Art-Forester). This movement subverted the commercial and privatized real estate logic of traditional "ecovilas" (ecovillages) to sow the concept of a Terravila Glocal, where the focus shifts away from commercial ownership and toward a culture of mutual access.
In April 2021, driven by the transformative grief of losing his mentor Alejandro Bedotti, and in a strong peer-matching alignment with Joaquim Ferreira, the project anchored its permanent physical roots in the state of Mato Grosso: at Sítio Bom Jesus, on the shores of the Manso Lake (Chapada dos Guimarães).
Act II: The Land and Our Work (Where Web3 Meets Ancestral Safeguard)
Our value proposition reached maturity by merging the digital, decentralized vanguard of Web3 with root-level socio-environmental impact driven by ancestral communities. We established a formal alliance with the PA Quilombo Association (APAQ), a traditional institution representing 145 native families who have protected our bioregion for over 30 years.
We operate as a networked enterprise sustained by a Shared Common Pool of Resources (PCdRC). Instead of hoarding private intellectual property, human, technical, and financial resources circulate openly and transparently, utilizing Web3/ReFi as our global onboarding interface (having participated in Brazil's very first Quadratic Funding round backed by agroforestDAO and Greenpill BR).
In practice, our daily operations are structured into integrated community fronts:
Act III: ReFi Governance and On-Chain Funding History
The collective intelligence of the OCA is operationalized through our Shared Common Pool of Resources (PCdRC), connecting the physical territory's "factory floor" directly to the global Web3/ReFi ecosystem. We are not a theoretical promise; we hold a transparent, audit-ready track record of on-chain decentralized coordination and funding that already fuels our common pool:
Currently, this ReFi architecture allows us to better articulate the deployment of the future Regenerative Barrier (Vetiver System). Once fully established, the Vetiver grass will function as critical green infrastructure. Its root network—reaching depths of up to 5 meters—will perform a "biological stapling" of the Manso Lake banks, mitigating the physical erosion risks that directly threaten the safety of the local settlement and its heritage.
Act IV: Objectives and Destination of Funds (Use of Funds)
The immediate objective of this grant is to capitalize our Shared Common Pool of Resources (PCdRC) to accelerate the construction of basic infrastructure, paving the way for our transition to a true bioregional scale. The resources will be deployed across two critical execution tracks:
Act V: Our Challenges (The Creative Tension)
Our greatest challenge lies in balancing the deep temporal canyon between the lightning-fast speed of digital Web3/ReFi systems and the slow, biological clock of nature and human relationships on the ground.
Regenerating land demands physical presence, mud under the fingernails, and the slow cultivation of transparent, non-transactional trust with traditional communities that have historically been exploited by predatory real estate models. Successfully navigating the political and logistical steps required to institutionalize an open-source, mutual-access ecosystem—in a region undergoing heavy pressure from conventional real estate speculation—is our most demanding creative tension.
By supporting OCA Terravila Glocal, you are not simply funding an environmental project; you are validating a highly replicable model proving that the future of human habitat is open-source, climate-resilient, and rooted in mutual access.
Evidence and reviews live on the open ATProto network and can be inspected by anyone.