What is Regenerative Design?
Regenerative design is a whole-systems approach to design and development that seeks not merely to minimize environmental harm, but to actively restore and enhance the capacity of living systems to evolve and thrive. Rather than aiming for less harm, regenerative design has the goal of producing buildings that have a net-positive impact on their surroundings, working with cyclical natural processes instead of linear throughput systems. The approach views human settlements, buildings, and communities as integral parts of larger ecological and social systems, with the potential to contribute positively to ecosystem health, community vitality, and evolutionary potential.
Origins & Lineage
In the 1970s, John T. Lyle introduced the term “regenerative design,” arguing that conventional sustainable design approaches would primarily maintain existing conditions rather than repair ecological imbalances created by human development. Lyle, a landscape architecture professor, saw the connection between concepts developed by Bob Rodale for regenerative agriculture and the opportunity to develop regenerative systems for all other aspects of the world, expanding agriculture’s concepts to all systems.
In 1984, Lyle published Design of Human Ecosystems, arguing that “designers must understand ecological order operating at a variety of scales and link this understanding to human values if we are to create durable, responsible, beneficial designs.” The idea for the Center for Regenerative Studies grew out of an assignment Professor John T. Lyle gave his graduate design class in 1976, challenging students to envision communities based on living within ecological limits. The development of regenerative architecture and design as a unique field began in 1994, with the publication of Lyle’s book Regenerative Design for Sustainable Development, which outlined comprehensive regenerative strategies emphasizing working with natural systems.
In parallel, the Regenesis Group began articulating theoretical and practical foundations for regenerative development in the mid-1990s. Bill Reed, an internationally recognized proponent and practitioner of regenerative development, has been a founding board member of the USGBC, a co-founder of LEED and a thought leader in the sustainability movement over the past three decades. Pamela Mang is a founding member of Regenesis Group and co-author of the book Regenerative Development and Design: A Framework for Evolving Sustainability, published in 2016.
How It’s Practiced
Regenerative design operates on fundamentally different premises than conventional sustainable design. Sustainable design as a construct is built around the idea of maintaining a state of equilibrium, whereas regenerative design goes beyond sustainability by aiming to restore and enhance ecosystems, seeking to create systems that are self-sustaining and regenerative, contributing positively to the environment and society.
The regenerative design paradigm encourages designers to use systems thinking, applied permaculture design principles, and community development processes to design human and ecological systems. Designers employing regenerative principles must deeply understand local ecosystems, cultural contexts, and material flows to create solutions that contribute to the overall health of the system. Regenerative design focuses its design work on improving the relationship between humans, places, and ecosystems.
In practice, this means starting with place-based understanding. Design practitioners can facilitate response in the built environment through the development, application and evolution of comprehensive new methodologies, explicitly shaped by a regenerative sustainability paradigm. Projects might include buildings that produce more energy than they consume, capture and clean water, restore habitat, sequester carbon, or strengthen community connections and economic systems.
Regenerative Design Today
Regenerative design is increasingly being applied in such sectors as agriculture, architecture, community planning, cities, enterprises, economics and ecosystem regeneration. This approach has gained significant recognition in recent years, particularly in architecture and urban planning, where projects demonstrate how built environments can actively contribute to ecosystem services rather than merely reducing harm.
Practitioners can encounter regenerative design through organizations like the Regenesis Institute for Regenerative Practice, which offers training programs including The Regenerative Practitioner series. The International Living Future Institute has emerged as a leader in codifying regenerative design through frameworks like the Living Building Challenge. Universities including California State Polytechnic University, Pomona maintain centers dedicated to regenerative studies that serve as living laboratories.
The field draws on multiple influences: The development of regenerative design has been influenced by approaches found in biomimicry, biophilic design, net-positive design, ecological economics, circular economics, as well as social movements such as permaculture, transition and the new economy.
Common Misconceptions
Regenerative design is not simply “advanced green building” or an incremental improvement on LEED certification. Architect Bill Reed highlighted that “sustainability, as currently practised in the built environment, is primarily an exercise in efficiency”—reducing harm through better technology and resource management.
It is not preservation or restoration alone. Successfully evolving a regenerative practice requires going beyond just adopting new techniques to taking on a new role for humans and designers, and a ‘new mind’—fundamentally shifting from mechanistic to ecological worldviews. A green roof or living wall labeled “regenerative” falls short unless integrated into larger ecosystem regeneration.
Regenerative design is also not a prescriptive methodology or certification checklist. It requires deep engagement with the unique patterns, potential, and stakeholders of each place. The work is developmental and evolutionary rather than formulaic, demanding ongoing learning and adaptation rather than procedural compliance.
How to Begin
For those new to regenerative design, start with foundational texts: John Tillman Lyle’s Regenerative Design for Sustainable Development (1994) provides the conceptual origins, while Pamela Mang and Ben Haggard’s Regenerative Development and Design: A Framework for Evolving Sustainability (2016) offers contemporary frameworks and methodologies.
Bill Reed’s 2007 article “Shifting from ‘sustainability’ to regeneration” in Building Research & Information provides an accessible entry point for understanding the paradigm shift. For those interested in the agricultural roots, explore Robert Rodale’s work on regenerative organic agriculture and permaculture design principles as articulated by Bill Mollison and David Holmgren.
Practical engagement might begin by studying place—understanding the ecological, social, and economic patterns of a specific location before attempting design interventions. Consider enrolling in courses through the Regenesis Institute or exploring case studies from the John T. Lyle Center for Regenerative Studies at Cal Poly Pomona. The shift to regenerative thinking requires patience and willingness to fundamentally reconsider humanity’s role within, rather than separate from, living systems.