Failure and Prevention

Lack of Clear Purpose or Diverging Values
Communities without a shared and explicit “why” tend to fragment into cliques, conflicts, or slow apathy.

OST’s Prevention Strategy:

  • A clear, publicly stated mission: to develop replicable, self-sufficient human-scale settlements that support psychological and ecological well-being
  • Onboarding process that includes values orientation — not dogma, but shared agreements
  • Use of collaborative governance tools (like sociocracy) to maintain alignment through structured dialogue

Poor Conflict Resolution or Avoidance Culture
Conflicts are inevitable — but when communities suppress, avoid, or mishandle them, trust erodes and people burn out.

OST’s Prevention Strategy:

  • Integrate structured, nonviolent conflict resolution frameworks from day one (e.g., restorative circles, trained mediators)
  • Treat conflict not as failure, but as a normal system signal that needs attention
  • Include emotional literacy and feedback training as part of resident education

Burnout from Overwork or Emotional Overload
Without clear roles or workload boundaries, “all hands on deck” can become exploitative or chaotic.

OST’s Prevention Strategy:

  • Define clear roles with time expectations (including rotating roles and off-rotation time)
  • Normalize non-participation without guilt in some aspects of communal life
  • Build automated systems (for food, cleaning, etc.) to reduce labor intensity
  • Foster a culture where rest and joy are seen as productive

Unclear Governance or Informal Power Hierarchies
In the absence of clear, inclusive structures, informal hierarchies form — often around charisma, seniority, or manipulation.

OST’s Prevention Strategy:

  • Use formal participatory governance models (e.g., sociocracy with clear domains, elected roles, rotating facilitation)
  • Make process documentation transparent (who decides what, how, and when)
  • Train residents in facilitation and collaborative decision-making

Financial Instability
Communities often depend on a few donors or lack income sources, leading to collapse when funds run out.

OST’s Prevention Strategy:

  • Diverse income streams: residency fees, donor support, product/service sales, fellowships, grants
  • Use revenue-based financing to scale carefully without venture capital pressure
  • Design for low fixed costs: automated infrastructure, modular expansion, shared resources
  • Transparent, nonprofit legal form (gGmbH or gUG) to build funder trust

Social Isolation from the Surrounding World
Communities that become inward-facing or suspicious of outsiders lose relevance and often face opposition.

OST’s Prevention Strategy:

  • Strong outreach strategy: wiki, open events, research partnerships, public reports
  • A permeable boundary: open to visits, collaboration, and transparent communication
  • Clear values that reject isolationism and anti-democratic ideologies
  • Partner with municipalities, universities, NGOs, and neighbors

Failure to Attract or Retain Skilled People
Communities sometimes romanticize “starting from scratch” and alienate people with real-world experience.

OST’s Prevention Strategy:

  • Frame OST as a place for professionals to build the next system, not a utopian escape
  • Design respectful roles for high-skill contributors (engineers, teachers, farmers, therapists)
  • Offer clear entry paths: sabbatical stays, remote roles, fellowships, phased commitments

Over-idealization of Harmony / Under-allowance for Individual Needs
Some communities collapse under the pressure of being “perfect” or avoiding difference.

OST’s Prevention Strategy:

  • Build in private spaces, not just shared ones
  • Respect different energy levels, family structures, and rhythms
  • Normalize disagreement, difference, and imperfect solutions
  • Treat psychological health as infrastructure, not personal luxury

Poor Physical Planning / Overcrowding / Design Incoherence
Communities often outgrow their plans or design without considering acoustics, privacy, mobility, etc.

OST’s Prevention Strategy:

  • Use modular geodesic layout with sound-buffered zones
  • Build in acoustic logic, accessibility, and green buffers
  • Start with a strong masterplan that allows organic but contained growth
  • Include separate zones for rest, work, celebration, and logistics

Summary Table: Failures and OST Defenses

Failure ModeOST Design Response
Fuzzy visionClear, shared purpose + public documentation
Conflict avoidanceConflict resolution tools + training
BurnoutRoles, rest culture, automation
Informal hierarchySociocracy + transparent governance
Financial fragilityDiverse income + revenue-based funding
IsolationismOpen infrastructure + external partners
Lack of skillsRole clarity + mission-aligned recruitment
Over-harmonySpace for difference + personal boundaries
Bad designMasterplan + modular zones + sound design