Dancing Rabbit Ecovillage

  • Community
  • 0 followers

About the Community

  • Established
  • Rural

What we do

Dancing Rabbit Ecovillage invites you to live, play, and work with us to help build a better world!

 

We founded Dancing Rabbit (DR) Ecovillage to discover how to live rich, vibrant lives while leaving an ecological footprint the planet can sustain. If you yearn to live a more fulfilling and sustainable life, we might be what you’re looking for.

 

By making sustainability the primary focus of our long-term vision and daily lives we’re creating a healthy alternative to modern mainstream US culture.

 

In 1997 the DR Land Trust purchased 280 acres in the rolling hills of northeastern Missouri. Since then we’ve been building a village from the ground up, creating homes, gardens, kitchens, and community infrastructure, not to mention the less-tangible necessities for a sustainable culture. We use consensus in our Village Council governance, value clear communication and peaceable co-existence with our neighbors, and continue to create our own songs, stories and traditions.

 

Members are responsible for meeting their own economic needs and do so in a wide variety of ways, primarily on-site (including telecommuting). Our vision is to grow to the size of small town (500 – 1000 people), with businesses, residences, and agricultural areas radiating out from the central village green.

 

We build natural and green homes, use sun and wind for power, and run our cooperatively-owned vehicles on renewable electricity when we have surplus energy. Diets are individually chosen, but many prioritize local, organic, and in-season foods.

 

We strive to be good stewards of our land, reserving many acres for wildlife habitat. We are reintroducing native prairie plants to help revitalize our region’s biodiversity and have planted over 10,000 trees to restore our land, stabilize the riparian zone, and provide sustainable wood for our community.

 

We are made up of individuals, families, and subcommunities, cooperating with each other to varying degrees and sharing as much of our lives as we choose. We encourage the development of cohousing and cooperatives.

 

To allow for economic diversity and simple living, we keep lease rates low, have no buy-in fee, and membership dues are income-based.

 

Outreach and education are integral to our mission, and the primary focus of the ecovillage’s own education and research nonprofit arm, the Center for Sustainable and Cooperative Culture. We’re also home to the Fellowship for Intentional Community (publishers of this Directory and Communities magazine).

 

Interested in Dancing Rabbit? Contact us to arrange a visit, get on our e-mailing list, or apply for a work exchange stint or workshop. We actively seek new members to live, play and work with us, modeling change for the better.

Our Vision

To create a society, the size of a small town or village, made up of individuals and communities of various sizes and social structures, which allows and encourages its members to live sustainably.*

 

To encourage this sustainable society to grow to have the size and recognition necessary to have an influence on the global community by example, education, and research.

 

*Sustainably: In such a manner that, within the defined area, no resources are consumed faster than their natural replenishment, and the enclosed system can continue indefinitely without degradation of its internal resource base or the standard of living of the people and the rest of the ecosystem within it, and without contributing to the non-sustainability of ecosystems outside.

Our Mission

To create a society, the size of a small town or village, made up of individuals and communities of various sizes and social structures, which allows and encourages its members to live sustainably.*

 

To encourage this sustainable society to grow to have the size and recognition necessary to have an influence on the global community by example, education, and research.

 

*Sustainably: In such a manner that, within the defined area, no resources are consumed faster than their natural replenishment, and the enclosed system can continue indefinitely without degradation of its internal resource base or the standard of living of the people and the rest of the ecosystem within it, and without contributing to the non-sustainability of ecosystems outside.

  • Community type
  • Ecovillage
  • Activities
  • Education
  • Services Business
  • Others

Video

  • 63 Total members
  • Open to new members
  • Open to visitors
  • Open to volunteers
Total
63

How to join

After a successful visit, one can begin the process of becoming a resident. After 6 months of residency, one can apply to become a member. For details see: https://www.dancingrabbit.org/ecovillage-life/residency-membership/.

Basic expectations or agreements for members

Please check out the visitor page on our website (www.dancingrabbit.org/visit), which describes a number of ways to visit Dancing Rabbit, including several three-day to two-week visitor periods at set times between April and October. If the visitor program is the best match for you, request a visitor questionnaire and our visitor team will help you plan and schedule a visit. It generally helps to contact us at least two months in advance, as spots in these programs fill up quickly.

Primary decision-making authority

  • All Community Members Together

The whole membership decides collectively.

Economic model

  • Independent Finances

Members maintain separate personal finances with minimal sharing.

Economic scenarios for this community

  • Members need to pay fees, dues, or similar to live there on a per month or per year basis
  • There is a labor obligation
  • Members typically need to have their own job or other personal source of income to cover their expenses while living in the community?

Additional economic information

Monthly fees/dues: Yes (amount not specified)
Labor: Encouraged or suggested
Members with pre-existing debt: Yes
Membership dues are 2% of income and everyone on farm pays a basic fee around $75/month which covers common house access, water, governance, trash services, etc.   Other common expenses include rent/lease payments, kitchen coop fees, vehicle use costs, as well as fees for various co-ops (some of which can be opted out of). Members are strongly encouraged to be on at least one committee or community-level task, and most are on more than one.

Shared resources and amenities that are accessible to everyone in the community

Common House, Garden(s), Vehicle Share, Library, Outbuilding(s), Swimming pond or pool, Outdoor Kitchen, Large Scale Kitchen, Tractor & Farm Equipment, Fire pit, Swingsets & play areas, wood fired sauna by the pond

Frequency of communal meals

  • 2-5 times per week

Substance use culture

  • Substance use appears in public spaces but no pressure

Property status

  • Privately owned

Setting

  • Rural

Countryside locations with significant distance from urban centers.

Self-produced energy

  • 33 - 66%

Energy sources used

  • Wind
  • Photovoltaic Solar

Self-produced food

  • 33 - 66%
  • Land area size
    280 acres

Reviews

Location

  • Missouri, United States

Dancing Rabbit Ecovillage

Promoted Needs and Offers

Need
Need
  • Communities with Openings
7 months ago

Oak Park Commons Cohousing – Plan to Move in Fall 2025

Illinois’ first cohousing community fosters intergenerational connection, diversity, and inclusiveness. We welcome all those who share our vision of creating a sustainable residential community in a vibrant urban suburb. Oak Park Commons Cohousing seeks new members. Join the dozen households that have already helped plan and design a five story, 24-unit building near the commercial heart of Oak Park, Illinois. The building includes a mix of one, two, and three, bedroom ADA accessible units. A package friendly first floor mailroom adjoins the lobby, elevator, and parking entrances. Noise mitigation and energy efficient air conditioning assure year-round comfort. The Carpenter & Madison streets corner location includes within a pedestrian friendly half mile radius: a middle school, bus stop, grocery co-op, drug store, bank, CTA train station, Unity Temple, Rush Hospital, Fox Park, Mills Park, and many restaurants. Madison has traffic calming and bike lanes. The Village commercial center, barely a mile away offers the Lake Theatre Cinema, Trader Joes, Whole Foods, Formula Fitness Center, Public Library, Frank Lloyd Wright Home and Studio, and specialty retail and service shops. Oak Park includes excellent K-12 schools. Lincoln public elementary school offers an optional Spanish bilingual program, Gwendolyn Brooks middle school’s wonderful performing arts opportunities and OPRF high school’s great college and career prep. Eight two and three bedroom units are still available for purchase starting at $406,640. Buyers pay a five percent earnest fee when signing a purchase agreement that goes toward down payment at closing. Units available for occupancy starting the last week of October 2025. Visit our website and talk with some of our members to learn more about who we are and how we envision building our community together.   Website: https://oakparkcommons.com/ Contacts: Charles Hoch 708-721-8817; Susan Stall 708-772-8817
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