Just Enough

Lessons from Japan for Sustainable Living, Architecture, and Design

232 pages

English language

Published June 27, 2022 by Stone Bridge Press.

ISBN:
978-1-61172-077-8
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OCLC Number:
1337408127

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5 stars (1 review)

If we want to live sustainably, how should we feel about nature? About waste? About our forests and rivers? About food? Just Enough is a book of stories and sketches that give valuable insight into what it is like to live in a sustainable society by describing life in Japan some two hundred years ago, during the late Edo period, when cities and villages faced many of the same environmental challenges we do today and met them beautifully and inventively.

4 editions

Essential reading

5 stars

Just Enough by Azby Brown is an amazing book which, by discussing how people lived in Edo, the city which would become Tokyo, and its environs in the 1700s and 1800s, gives us a blueprint for making our own 21st century towns and cities truly sustainable. Edo was probably the biggest city in the world at the height of the Edo period and it was far more advanced in a number of ways than its European counterparts, mainly due to the Japanese people having different priorities. A large population living in an isolated nation needed to become self-sufficient in everything they needed and Just Enough brilliantly demonstrates how they did so.

Azby Brown explores many aspects of Edo life from minimalist fuel usage to sympathetic architectural design, circular manufacturing systems which prioritised reuse and repair, how eschewing animal agriculture left all the farming land for human food production, and the …

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