I went right over to the Village Homes Community Center and rented that out for a September Public Presentation.  Then with flyers on every bulletin board in town, and flyers planted in the books in the various bookstores we started to get some real traction. No one had heard the word “cohousing” yet, so it was an uphill climb.
 
Then we met a couple, Kevin and Linda Cloud, that were willing to help organize the upcoming public presentation, and to help get the word out locally. We got all of the free calendar listings that we could. 
 
About 80 people showed up. Katie and I took turns presenting, like we always did in those days. At the end of the presentation, the head of Davis City Planning Commission stood up to ask a question, but mostly to make a statement. “The next application for any large-scale multi-family housing project in Davis should include a cohousing community, right,” she said. Of course, we answered, “Yes.”
 
A developer planning a new 200+ housing project was also in the room and she knew it. This just goes to show that to find the right partners, you need to get the word out there. But that’s a story for another article. We knew that the first community in the U.S. had to work well for this model to catch on. So after some finagling, we got ourselves positioned to be the architects to design the site plan, the common house and the houses with the entire group. That lovely community is Muir Commons and they moved in in the summer of 1991.
 
Muir Commons received considerable press and we were off to the races in the U.S. It was the first model cohousing project built in North America and it remains a model project today. The availability of a comprehensive discussion, the book, model projects, millions of hours, and the covey of professionals who, with dedication and integrity, and non-profit organizations have impelled cohousing along. Now we have many more. We are well on our way to 200 cohousing communities in North America and well on our way to making cohousing a known option for housing, communities, and neighborhoods, exemplifying how neighbors can relate to each other and cooperate with and support each other in America.
Anyway, at 55 more projects, hopefully model communities and many more by others, the rest is history. But in this case this history of cohousing in North America is just the beginning.