Operation Fresh Start

NCAT logo
Using Sustainable Technologies To Recover From Disaster
Home > Case Studies > Soldiers Grove, Wisconsin

Soldiers Grove, Wisconsin

The pioneer of sustainable redevelopment for flood communities is Soldiers Grove, a picturesque village of about 600 on the banks of the Kickapoo River in southwest Wisconsin. Nearly 20 years ago, after decades of repeated flooding, residents decided to build a new town center on higher ground. The new Soldiers Grove was officially completed in 1983.

Soldiers Grove was ahead of its time for a number of reasons. First, by opting to relocate, the villagers chose to work with the river rather than attempt to control it. They chose mitigation at a time when dams and levees were hailed as monuments to society's dominion over nature.

Second, Soldiers Grove saw the relocation project not just as an opportunity to duplicate their old town, but as a chance to create something much better. Rather than rush to get buildings up and running as quickly as possible, the villagers took their time.

Perhaps the most dramatic outcome of that careful planning process was the decision to make all of the new town center buildings energy-efficient and solar-heated. Soldiers Grove became the first business district of its kind in the nation. The village passed ordinances stipulating that new buildings be built to specific thermal performance standards and obtain at least 50 percent of their heating needs with solar systems. Residents also passed a solar access ordinance to ensure that future buildings don't block the sun for existing structures.

In 1991, Michael Schofield, then a graduate student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, studied the solar systems in 10 of Soldiers Grove's commercial buildings for his master's degree thesis. His goal was to find out whether the systems were cost-effective, and his conclusion was that the majority of the systems (7 of the 10) were economical. Those that were not were not sized properly.

Finally, Soldiers Grove pioneered the concept of "multipurpose recovery" for hazard-prone communities. The villagers used the occasion of relocation to solve a number of community problems. The energy efficiency and solar ordinances helped to keep valuable energy dollars from escaping the local economy. The old floodplain was developed into a well-used municipal park. The town center was once again adjacent to the state highway, which had bypassed the old town in the 1950s, hurting businesses. A second municipal well and reservoir were built outside the floodplain, and sewer and water services were extended into new areas, paving the way for future growth.

The steps taken by Soldiers Grove in the late 1970s are just as viable today, 20 years later. In fact, they're even more feasible, due to dramatic improvements made in energy efficiency and renewable energy technologies and to the significant research that has gone into sustainable development during the past two decades.

But although today's disaster-prone towns have better tools at their disposal, there remains much to be learned from Soldiers Grove in the area of organizing people. Even the most progressive and well-thought-out sustainable development plans will fail without the full support of the community.

Soldiers Grove learned the importance of citizen involvement throughout the entire relocation process. Using both the formal channels of citizen committees and the informal, "open-door" approach of the project coordinator, the people of Soldiers Grove were deeply involved in the creation of their new town center. To learn the nuts and bolts of how they pulled together to build the nation's first solar business district, read further in Rebuilding for the Future: A Guide to Sustainable Redevelopment for Disaster-Affected Communities .

A thirty-minute videotape of the Soldiers Grove experience is available to rent or purchase from BullFrog Films (call 1-800-543-3764 for ordering information)

And for more information, contact the following:

Ardelle Knutson, Village Clerk
P.O. Box 121
Soldiers Grove, WI 54655
(608) 624-3264

Please Help
Consider donating to the ongoing Hurricane Katrina relief efforts. The following two organizations are examples of nonprofits that are helping farmers in the South.

Federation of Southern Cooperatives: Land Assistance Fund

Southern Mutual Help Association - Rural Recovery Fund
Hurricane Assistance for Agricultural Producers
News, publications, aid organizations, and federal, state, local and nonprofit resources. Learn more...
The Latest...