Waking Life’s Landcare initiative is located at the Barragem das Nascentes in the Alentejo region of Portugal, where 35 hectares of land surrounded by monoculture eucalyptus plantations are under their stewardship. The area had been largely abandoned and ecologically strained by surrounding timber extraction. Since 2021, Waking Life has been restoring the landscape into a biodiverse public park where natural ecosystems, culture and community can grow together.
The land’s geography, rolling hills, granite soils and the reservoir guides our restoration approach. Waking Life focuses on regenerating soil health, enhancing water retention and increasing biodiversity through syntropic agroforestry systems. Over the past years, thousands of native trees and shrubs have been planted, supported by erosion-control interventions, wildlife-friendly habitat creation and ongoing monitoring.
The Landcare project functions as both a living laboratory and a community platform. A year-round group of around twelve residents forms the core of the project, maintaining the land, hosting educational programs and cultivating practices that connect ecological regeneration with artistic and social experimentation. The wider community (local residents, volunteers, artists, researchers and festival participants) regularly contributes to planting days, knowledge-sharing and cultural programming.
The project sprouted from the annual Waking Life festival, whose 13,000 visitors help provide visibility, resources and collaborative networks that sustain long-term restoration efforts. These constant exchanges nurture healthier ecosystems for resilient rural futures and thriving commons shaped by care, creativity and collective stewardship.
The land around Barragem das Nascentes was an abandoned, overlooked corner of a region marked by rural exodus. Today it has transformed into a vibrant cultural ecosystem where families, artists, scientists, cultural professionals, university students gather, learn, grow and celebrate. Trees and bushes are bringing back fertility to the soil and the site became an invitation for nature exploration. What was once forgotten has become a living commons, an inspiring landscape of ecological renewal and community connection.
Please note: You will need to arrange your own travel visa, if one is required.
The green Art Lab Alliance
University of Science of Lisbon
The Municipality of Crato
Erasmus+
Solidarity Corps
Compost making
Tree planting
Food growing
Erosion control
Soil building
Cover cropping
Habitat creation
Agroforestry
Community building
Fire prevention
Restoration of livelihoods
Natural building
Many Ecosystem Restoration Communities are using platforms to show how the work they’re doing on the ground is having a positive impact on the land and local biodiversity. If a Restor or iNaturalist logo is visible below, click through to view their impact on that platform.