Welcome to the journey. Welcome to the rhythm.
Green infrastructure is woven into the city’s texture: permeable streets, bio‑filtration swales, and vertical gardens that double as wildlife corridors. The city’s master plan reserves 30 % of its land for native habitats, a figure far above the 12 % average for European municipalities.
What does your name mean to you? Drop a comment below—I read every single one. 🔥 scatrina
Scatrina’s pilot projects have largely been limited to mid‑size cities with manageable populations (30 k–150 k). Scaling the model to megacities poses logistical challenges, particularly concerning the physical limits of modular infrastructure and the coordination of thousands of civic clusters.
Within three years, the concept escaped the realm of speculative illustration. The municipality of Valdora (a midsized town in northern Italy) launched the Scatrina Initiative in 2025, translating the blueprint into policy. By 2027, similar pilots were underway in Vancouver’s Kitsilano district, Seoul’s Mapo‑gu neighborhood, and the newly created eco‑city of Greenfield, Texas. The rapid uptake was fueled by a confluence of pressures—climate‑induced flooding, rising housing costs, and a growing demand for democratic participation in planning processes. Welcome to the journey
If you have a name that people stumble over, or if you have ever felt like you needed to shrink yourself to fit in—you are in the right place. We aren't doing that anymore.
To me, means:
Scatrina is a fascinating and enigmatic fungus that continues to capture the imagination of scientists, foragers, and enthusiasts. Its unique characteristics, limited availability, and potential medicinal properties have cemented its place in the world of mycology. As we continue to learn more about this mysterious fungus, it's essential that we prioritize conservation efforts to protect Scatrina and its habitats for future generations.