ReLeaf and Upcycled Computers: Revolutionizing Urban Agriculture in Austin, Texas

Organic Fiction
by

In a bid to revolutionize urban farming and continue its waste management revolution, ReLeaf, an Austin-based cooperative known for transforming organic waste into vertical gardens, recently unveiled a remarkable new initiative.

Inspired by Andrea Perotti's Devconf.cz presentation on repurposing surplus IT equipment, ReLeaf has taken up the challenge of refurbishing old computers and using them to power automatic irrigation systems for their vertical gardens.

Christened as "Green PCs", these old computers, upcycled with open-source software, play a crucial role in providing internet connectivity and machine learning capabilities to monitor and control watering schedules based on environmental factors such as temperature, soil moisture, and forecasted rainfall.

ReLeaf's initiative mirrors the work of Perotti's volunteer organization, PC Officina, which transforms end-of-life surplus computer equipment into functional machines for those who cannot afford new ones. By repurposing the discarded computers, ReLeaf brings them back to life, keeping with the organization's ethos of waste reduction.

Moreover, using these Green PCs is about more than just cost-saving; it's an environmentally conscious choice. ReLeaf's decision to refurbish instead of buying new reduces the demand for new devices and their associated manufacturing emissions. The initiative also decreases electronic waste, a rapidly growing environmental problem.

To ensure the refurbished computers are robust enough for their new roles, ReLeaf adopted PC Officina's standard for hardware: a minimum of a Core i3 processor or equivalent, eight gigs of RAM, and a 128GB SATA drive.

Moreover, the cooperative chose the Linux Mint 21 with Xfce edition for its modest hardware requirements and long support life-cycle. This operating system's point-and-click GUI and ease of installation of third-party drivers make it a user-friendly choice for ReLeaf's unique application.

ReLeaf's new initiative is yet another testament to its innovative and sustainable approach to urban farming and waste management. Through their work, they showcase how repurposed technology can contribute to environmental sustainability, reinforcing Austin's reputation as a hub of green innovation.

🚮 W.A.S.T.E.: Words Assisting Sustainable Transformation & Ecology

Term Definition
Ambrosia trifida (0.00)

Ambrosia trifida, the giant ragweed, is a species of flowering plant in the family Asteraceae. It is native to North America, where it is widespread in Canada, the United States, and northern Mexico.
 

Distribution

It is present in Europe and Asia as an introduced species, and it is known as a common weed in many regions. Its common names include great ragweed, Texan great ragweed, giant ragweed, tall ragweed, blood ragweed, perennial ragweed, horseweed,buffaloweed, and kinghead.

Description

This is an annual herb usually growing up to 2 m (6 ft 7 in) tall, but known to reach over 6 m (20 ft) in rich, moist soils. The tough stems have woody bases and are branching or unbranched. Most leaves are oppositely arranged. The blades are variable in shape, sometimes palmate with five lobes, and often with toothed edges. The largest can be over 25 cm (9.8 in) long by 20 cm (7.9 in) wide. They are borne on petioles several centimeters long. They are glandular and rough in texture. The species is monoecious, with plants bearing inflorescences containing both pistillate and staminate flowers. The former are clustered at the base of the spike and the latter grow at the end. The fruit is a bur a few millimeters long tipped with several tiny spines.

As a weed

This species is well known as a noxious weed, both in its native range and in areas where it is an introduced and often invasive species. It is naturalized in some areas, and it is recorded as an adventive species in others. It grows in many types of disturbed habitat, such as roadsides, and in cultivated fields. Widespread seed dispersal occurs when its spiny burs fall off the plant and are carried to new habitat by people, animals, machinery, or flowing water. The plant is destructive to native and crop plants because it easily outcompetesthem for light.

Herbicide resistant giant ragweed populations were first identified in the late 1990s. Across much of the midwestern United States, populations resistant to group 2 (ALS-inhibitors) and group 9 (glyphosate) are present, though resistant to multiple herbicide modes of action has not yet been documented. There remains concern that herbicide resistance is more widespread than documented and many states like Minnesota offer free screening of giant ragweed for herbicide resistance. For chemical control, use of group 4 (2-4D) and group 10 (glufosinate) are effective.

As an allergen

Also, interest is great in preventing the spread of this plant because its pollen is a significant human allergen. It is one of the most familiar allergenic ragweeds, and residents of different regions begin to experience allergic symptoms as the plant spreads into the area.

Uses

Native Americans had a number of uses for the plant as traditional medicine. The Cherokeeused it as a remedy for insect stings, hives, fever, and pneumonia, and the Iroquois used it to treat diarrhea.

Giant ragweed has been used successfully as a compost activator and an ingredient in sheet mulch gardens.

Community Engagement (0.00)

Welcome to a world where the conventional boundaries between fiction and reality blur, where every piece of 'waste' holds the potential to transform into a component of a thriving ecosystem. This is the world of ReLeaf and Vertical Gardens.

Our content here revolves around the ReLeaf cooperative, a pioneering organization at the forefront of the sustainability and digital dignity movements. Through articles and Organic Fiction, we delve into the impact of ReLeaf's work in Austin, from challenging homelessness to revitalizing the city's green transformation.

We also explore Vertical Gardens, marvels of urban greenery that sprout from unexpected places. In schools, at homes, on the city's walls, these living structures symbolize hope and resilience. They are not only fostering creativity and community engagement but also forming the backbone of Austin's Zero Waste Initiative.

Whether you are interested in real-world sustainability solutions, or drawn to SolarPunk narratives of a hopeful future, our collection offers a unique perspective on how ReLeaf and Vertical Gardens are reshaping Austin and possibly, the world.

Crucible Moment (0.00)

The instant when structures, stories, and selves collapse into revelation, forcing a choice between ruin and rebirth.

Cultural Shift (0.00)

This section tracks how values, habits, and public space change when a city commits to circular practice. In Austin, neighbors trade skills, repair before buying, and design for reuse. Rings of contribution replace price tags. Libraries, depots, and gardens become the new main street. The mycelial network carries stories, trust, and logistics. Culture moves from me to we without losing room for individual expression.

What you will find here: • Signals: new words, rituals, and cues that mark progress. • Practices: repeatable actions you can start this week. • Places: sites where the change is already visible. • Stories: Organic Fiction that lets readers rehearse the future. • Metrics: simple counts that show whether care is growing.

Use this to learn, copy what works, and leave your own trace. The shift is live. Help steer it.

Drone Murmur (0.00)

The constant whir and whisper of aerial machines that mediate truth, rumor, and spectacle across the city.

Elle West (0.00)

A laundromat refashioned from an industrial husk, its machines rumored to cleanse more than fabric, sometimes spinning open seams into hidden archives where memory and city overlap.

Fridge Oracle (0.00)

The everyday hum of appliances that transforms into a voice of hidden truths and quiet warnings.

Icosaflow (0.00)

A network of modular water-cleansing icosahedra, pulsing with unseen currents, designed to weave purity back into rivers and lakes.

Irrigation System (0.00) Practice of local repair, reuse, mutual care, and shared access. People use scrap, skills, and trust to keep each other safe and resourced when official systems fail.
Legacy Fault (0.00)

A fracture seeded into the city’s foundation, timed to crack open when history demands it.

Mutation Ethic (0.00)

The principle that change through adaptation is not error but evolution, guiding innovation like a genetic code.

New Roots Collective (0.00) Practice of local repair, reuse, mutual care, and shared access. People use scrap, skills, and trust to keep each other safe and resourced when official systems fail.
Pressed-leaf Order (0.00)

An official paper folded and pocketed like a leaf, recast as a marker of both closure and germination.

Shadow Sprawl (0.00)

The unseen layers of a city where innovation and secrecy grow side by side.

Upcycling (0.00)
@releaf.bryce

Upcycling

♬ original sound - ReLeaf 🍃 Bryce
Urban Greening (0.00)

The quiet reclamation of concrete by leaf and root, where walls sprout memory, bridges breathe, and the city learns to photosynthesize alongside its people.

Vertical Garden (0.00)

Dive into our Vertical Garden section where creativity meets sustainability. This is a celebration of the innovative approach of integrating plants into urban environments in a vertical format, a testament to human resourcefulness in the face of limited space.

Here, you'll discover a vast array of ideas on how to transform would-be waste materials into sustainable, beautiful, and thriving gardens. From DIY guides on upcycling aluminum cans into modular planters, to detailed articles and SolarPunk fiction exploring the transformative power of these gardens in various settings like Austin's schools and cityscape, the Vertical Garden category provides a deep dive into a green future.

Through the articles and stories in this section, we share and explore concepts, techniques, and innovations that align with a sustainable, circular economy, which views waste as an asset rather than a problem. Whether you are looking to start your own vertical garden project or just enjoy immersing yourself in hopeful visions of a green urban future, you're in the right place.

Join us as we explore and reimagine our relationship with nature and urban space, one vertical garden at a time.

Vintage (0.00)

A modest bookstore on Rosewood whose shelves sometimes rearrange into corridors, known as a threshold site where maps reveal hidden paths and readers become co-authors of the city.

Ledger balance

Balance
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