On the occasion of the anniversary of Thomas More’s book Utopia, another book Ecotopia 2121, is due
to be released exactly 500 years afterwards. In a fascinating opinion piece, Alan Marshall, an
environmental sociologist, and author of Ecotopia 2121, outlines a green vision for the future of 100
cities around the word, by focusing on the example of Leuven, Belgium, where Utopia was first printed.
Published in EuroScientist via SciencePOD.
Journeys toward Ecotopia 2121
Imagining how our cities will evolve in the 22nd century gives food for
thought on their sustainability
This year, 2016, marks the 500th anniversary of an iconic idea—that of utopia; an idea released upon
the world in 1516. Thomas More, an English statesman, published his book 'Utopia' about a
mysterious and faraway ideal island-nation. In celebration of its half-millennium birthday, the book
Ecotopia 2121, will be released exactly 500 years after More’s Utopia was published. The exact
publication date of Utopia is not precisely known but it was sometime in the late autumn of 1516.
Ecotopia 2121 is a graphic artwork exhibition of 100 future Green cities from around the world via
graphic artwork. The artwork is then interpreted through 100 original stories that detail each city’s
transformation into a super-ecofriendly utopia by the year 2121.
From Utopia to Ecotopia
Some historians believe Thomas More’s Utopia was inspired by European explorers, like Christopher
Columbus and Vespucci Amerigo, who brought back tales from the New World. These included
stories about the social forms of American native tribes. Other historians believe Utopia was just a
parody of life in England under King Henry VIII, which is probably why he published the book in the
Latin language, in Belgium. Eventually, Thomas More had angered Henry VIII one too many times
about the need to obey the dictates of the Pope in Rome. His head eventually ended on a pike on the
London Bridge.
Yet, the idea of Utopia has survived for over five centuries. It has now flourished into an endearing
concept, albeit a little too radical for some, in the world of arts and literature, as well as in
philosophy and politics. In this vein, I like to think of Ecotopia 2121 as a book radical in its
imagination and radically Green. It offers myriad alternative visions for the future of the world’s
cities – emphasising both social development and technological change.
The work 'Ecotopia 2121' showcases cities near and familiar but also many exotic and faraway. Some
of the cities may even sound fictitious: El Dorado, is included, for example, along with Timbuktu,
Xanadu and Shangri-La. All of these cities actually exist. The colorful nature of the book is best
explained by taking the example of a city from Ecotopia 2121, which incidentally is the city where
Utopia, the original 1516 book, was born. This city is Leuven in Belgium.
Sustainable city of Leuven 2121
The story of Leuven in 2121 starts with a question about revolutionaries like Vladimir Lenin, Che
Guevara and Aung San Suu Kyi. Why are there no photographs of these revolutionaries consuming
cabbage? One theory suggests that children who positively refuse to eat their cabbage go on to
become great revolutionaries. Let me explain in greater details.
In the ecofriendly age of the 22nd Century, it will probably be considered impolite to insult any
green organism. But let’s face it, for children all over Europe, cabbage is still likely to be regarded as
one of the vilest foodstuffs in the entire universe. Just a small whiff of cabbage bubbling fetidly
away in a cooking pot will likely make future kids gag just as it does today. Despite this, cabbage
seems to remain a popular dish in northern Europe.
One theory for this strange circumstance is the use of cabbage as a parenting tool. Most children
would happily go through the whole week obeying their parents’ every whim just so they could be
allowed the one misdemeanour of not eating their cabbage at dinner time. Something great
revolutionaries refuse to subject themselves to. Thus, this could explain why no photographs exist of
Lenin, Guevara and Suu Kyi eating cabbage.
But of course, as people mature, a taste for cabbage is often acquired. In the Belgian city of Leuven
2121, they have turned cabbage into an art form as the city promotes itself to be the ‘Winter
Vegetarian Capital of the World’. Every day of winter is classed as a Veggie Day, where restaurants
and schools serve up vegetarian meals. Cabbage is the ‘queen of the vegetables’ in this season. It is
also a darling of ‘sustainable food’ since cabbage production does not require heated glasshouses--it
quite likes cooler climates. What’s more, if you don’t mind eating it with a few insect bites in it,
cabbage does not require pesticides to grow. Finally, cabbage can also be grown wild to add to the
biodiversity of the Leuven cityscape. Maybe, by 2121, it will be a plant considered worthy of
monumental regard in cities like Leuven.
Word view of sustainability
Leuven is just one city, of course. And in a world suffering from a global environmental crisis, the
good ecological deeds of single cities may be of little global significance. However, the Ecotopia
2121 project--and the book of the same name--tells stories about 100 different cities, with 100
pieces of artwork, across all seven continents. Some of the stories and artworks are much more
serious and scientific than that portrayed here for Leuven.
Arguably, when dealing with cities and societies so far into the future, there needs to be at least a
little touch of the fantastic involved. But even in the more fantastic scenarios, there is an attempt to
convey the way diverse cities can potentially adapt their local customs and knowledge to help make
their small part of the globe more sustainable.
Many researchers exhibit trepidation about making projections for very long-term futures. However,
most of us would admit that one thing is for sure: eventually the 22nd century will roll around. And,
at that time, cities will still be a popular form of social organisation. Indeed, some projections cast
humanity to be 80 percent urbanised by the end of this century. So, it is not a waste of time to think
about their futures; even though readers will not likely be around to see it. In exploring our ideas of
future cities, we bring into sharp focus our own assumptions about better tomorrows for humanity.
And we can then go on to debate these prospective futures, via science, via social science, or via
politics, as needs be.
Alan Marshall
Alan is a Lecturer in the environmental social science program of Mahidol University, Thailand. His
research for the Ecotopia 2121 project, and for other environmental projects, has seen him work at
universities and institutes all over Europe, Asia and Australasia.
Photo credit, reproduced with permission from Unholy Vault Designs and A. Marshall, 2016. Image
inserted within the text: Utopia Map (by H. Holbein, 1516).