Hubs

Local or thematic collaboration spaces connected to the Labs programme and wider network.

Residencies

Time-bounded intensive settings for teams, partners, or cohorts to work, learn, and document together.

Prototypes

Early hubs can test the operational model before the foundation claims a mature network.

Why place matters

Digital coordination is useful, but some collaboration needs shared time, shared space, and embodied trust. CCE Labs can use hubs and residencies to create the conditions for deeper work.

A hub is not only a venue. It is a hosted environment for learning, coordination, experimentation, and community. It may be physical, digital, local, thematic, or hybrid.

Hub types

CCE Labs can work with several hub types:

  • Local hubs around city, regional, or community challenges.
  • Thematic hubs around topics such as ecological education, regenerative entrepreneurship, collaborative governance, or AI-supported sustainability work.
  • Learning hubs for workshops, practice groups, and training.
  • Project hubs for concrete initiatives that need collaboration support.
  • Research hubs for shared inquiry into governance, collective intelligence, and social experimentation.
  • Digital hubs that connect knowledge, people, methods, and projects across locations.

Residencies

Residencies are intensive time-bounded formats. They can bring people together for days, weeks, or longer to work on a shared challenge with facilitation, reflection, documentation, and community practice.

A residency should not be treated as a retreat from the real world. It should be a structured environment where collaboration patterns can be tested and improved before they are brought back into wider contexts.

Rural Hub 1 as prototype

Rural Hub 1 can be framed as a prototype idea within the programme: a place to test how a hub hosts Labs teams, residencies, shared learning, and ecological practice. Its value is the model it can help validate, not the claim that a full hub network already exists.