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New! University of Texas-Austin's
Radiance Community Rainwater Harvesting Study (PDF only)
Radiance Contact List
(password-protected; contact webmaster for details)
Welcome Letter, with Community Obligations and Activities
(password-protected; contact webmaster for details)
Map to Radiance
Upcoming Events:
Potluck Schedule 2006
Guru Purnamah, Full Moon Boat Ride 2006... we had fun! see pictures
Radiance Property Owners Association Board Minutes
Radiance Community Pool
Architecture and Building Committee
Covenants (PDF)
Bylaws (PDF)
Lot lines, plats
Radiance property for sale or rent
Radiance History
Contact community manager, president, webmaster, etc.
Join the Radiance-Talk discussion list |
Small
Radiance Phase I Plat (56K)
A scan of a 8 1/2 by 14-inch piece of paper (aka "legal size"),
in black and white, of what Radiance lot lines look like.That smudge in
upper left corner is from a rusting paperclip.Most of the numbers and
measurements on this image are not legible, but here's at least a rough
overview of our neighborhood (65 acres, including greenbelt, common areas,
etc.). Bill says that this paper shows most of Phase I, the easternmost
portion.
Larger
Radiance Phase I Plat (93K)
This is the same document, a good overview with some portions that are
actually legible. Choose this if your screen is larger than 15 inches
or your resolution is higher than 640 x 480 pixels.
Very
large Radiance Phase I Plat (777K)
Same document--this image has many more of the numbers/measurements legible.
This image is very very VERY large.Uh, it might be a pretty long download
if you are on a slow web connection.
Questions
& Answers About Radiance Phase I
(wherein Jeanine Christensen interviews Bill Christensen)
Why are those
lot lines drawn the way they are?
In a word: loans.
In the 1980s DevCo (the
Development Co-operative that was responsible for turning Christal Ranch
into Goldenwood, Goldenwood West, and Radiance) needed to borrow money
from a bank to start building Radiance. DevCo envisioned building something
similar to what Austin Transcendental Meditators and Sidhas were already
familiar with from Maharishi University and the Austin TM center on
Nueces Street near the University of Texas--Austin: private housing
with common facilities such as school, dining hall, recreational areas,
meditation hall, kitchen.
DevCo would then own these
common facilities, and it would "own" the residential buildings
as well, granting "100-year leases" to residents who would
then care for it as if it were their own. (Another community-based living
arrangement having similar flavor is "co-housing.")
Each family or person would have leased a private living space, smaller
than a whole house because certain rooms (like a fully-realized kitchen
and dining room) would not have needed to be included.
Texas banks were unwilling
to lend money to a construction project so unorthodox. These banks,
like nearly all banks in the U.S., were mostly familiar with single-family
residences on individually owned lots--projects that could be repossessed
and re-sold easily if the borrower defaulted on the loan. The bank would
be protected from losing money. Lending for construction of a community
this and community that, and homes that have no what? Too risky, and
not easy to resell.
"All right," DevCo
said. "If there is only one way to get approval for a loan, we'll
start with individually owned property and later we'll switch to a co-operatively-owned
model." DevCo subdivided Radiance into one- and half-acre lots.
Why then is
Radiance not held in common, co-operatively? What happened?
The idea was that DevCo was
going to "buy back" everyone's home, making all of Radiance
co-operatively-owned. The experiment of an all-meditator village would
only have been "enforceable" through a co-operatively-owned
strategy as it would have ensured control of who would live in Radiance.
This practice would have prevented redlining, which is illegal."Redlining"
is defined as discrimination (based on gender, race, creed, ethnic origin
etc.) against a person or group of people by refusing to grant loans,
mortgages, or insurance to him or them.
DevCo folded in 1989, a kind
of unofficial bankruptcy, lacking even the $500 to file for official
bankruptcy. Assets from DevCo were transferred to Radiance Property
Owners Association, Radiance Water Supply Corporation, Radiance Foundation
(responsible for the maintenance and upkeep of the Dome). The Maharishi
School for the Age of Enlightenment operated in the old TM residential
building, which had been moved from the Nueces address to "The
Colony" just up the road from where Radiance has been built. The
school, which opened in 1981, closed its doors in 2001.
What are those
big lots on this plat?
Lot 24 is where the Dome
is. Lot 19A is septic field for homes on Lot 19; Lot 19 is the two-bedroom
Garden Homes. Lot 23 is the Royal Garden Homes and Lot 23A is the septic
field across the street servicing those homes. Lot 22 was subdivided
by Lia Austin into 4 two-acre lots and one greenbelt lot that runs up
the west side of Lot 1 and behind Lots 1-4.
Lot 13 is where our community
manager Mary Buchanan lives, just to give another reference point. Lot
20, which seems like the "first" lot there on the left side,
is the Pool lot.
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