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As cities around the world reckon with climate challenges, biodiversity loss, and the social fragmentation caused by unchecked development, a new model for living is emerging—one that turns to nature not only for inspiration but for co-creation. Enter the “Bioregional Hub:” a place-based, integrated system of living that harmonizes human settlements with natural ecosystems. These hubs aren’t utopian dreams—they’re real-world prototypes reshaping how we live, build, govern, and grow. And they are poised to become the most vital infrastructure of our time.

What is a Bioregional hub?

Bioregional hubs are more than just eco-communities—they are living laboratories for regeneration, rooted in the ecological, cultural, and economic realities of their specific landscapes. Informed by regenerative design and Indigenous land stewardship, these hubs serve as blueprints for how humanity can thrive within the limits of nature—rather than in spite of them.

At their core, Bioregional Hubs integrate:

These principles serve as the scaffolding for a new era of climate-adaptive, community-centered development.


From Movement to Model: The Origins of Bioregionalism

Bioregionalism emerged in the 1970s in response to the alienation of people from their environments. It asked a simple but revolutionary question: What if we lived in a way that truly honored the land we’re on?

The answers became more sophisticated over time. Today’s bioregional hubs are a synthesis of decades of environmental wisdom, design thinking, and community practice. They are shaped by movements like permaculture, Indigenous sovereignty, and regenerative urbanism.

And now, they’re shaping the future of cities.

“I believe the future of regenerative living lies in bioregional hubs—where communities are rooted in local ecology, regenerative principles drive economies, and collaboration sparks innovation. Bioregional hubs reconnect communities with their local environments, offering place-based solutions to our most pressing global challenges.” – Tony Cho, Founder & CEO, Future of Cities


Why Bioregional Hubs Matter Now

As the climate crisis escalates and social trust erodes, we need solutions that are:

This is not just environmentalism—it’s regenerative placemaking. It’s where real estate, resilience, and reverence for nature converge.


ChoZen: A Living Example in Florida

This vision comes alive at ChoZen Eco-Retreat, co-founded by Tony and Ximena Cho along Florida’s San Sebastian River. Situated within a richly biodiverse watershed and in collaboration with organizations like Wildpath, Path of the Panther, and the Florida Wildlife Corridor, ChoZen operates as a bioregional hub in action.

At ChoZen, every decision—from water management to community programming—is rooted in local ecology. The land is not a backdrop, but a collaborator. With offerings like eco-tours, wellness immersions, and regenerative development workshops, ChoZen is catalyzing a cultural shift—one that moves us from extraction to co-creation.


Centering Conservation: CCRL

The heartbeat of this hub is the ChoZen Center for Regenerative Living (CCRL)—a nonprofit dedicated to conservation demonstration and community empowerment. CCRL connects changemakers, land stewards, artists, and youth in active regeneration, from habitat restoration to circular economic pilots.

It’s not about building back better. It’s about building forward—in harmony with nature, not in opposition to it.


The Future of Cities is Bioregional

Bioregional hubs like ChoZen are not outliers—they are prototypes for the next generation of human settlements. As cities continue to grow, we must ask ourselves: How do we grow with integrity, with care, and with creativity?

“The future of cities will be shaped by those who remember how to live in deep relationship with place.” – Tony Cho

It’s time to shift from monocultures to biodiverse neighborhoods. From concrete jungles to living ecologies. From top-down design to grassroots co-creation.