Berea Kentucky: A Sustainable Living Community

By David Wann
Published on July 9, 2008
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Berea, Kentucky, is a sustainable living community. Artist Ken Gastineau at work in his jewelry studio.
Berea, Kentucky, is a sustainable living community. Artist Ken Gastineau at work in his jewelry studio.
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A Berea artist blows glass beads for spectators.
A Berea artist blows glass beads for spectators.

A great place to live you’ve never heard of is Berea Kentucky, a sustainable living community. Berea unites art, education and sustainability.

Berea Kentucky: A Sustainable Living Community

The story of how Berea became the “folk arts and crafts capital of Kentucky” is itself a local folk tale. In 1893, William Frost, the president of Berea College, took a summer horseback trip through the mountains of Appalachia to recruit students. His mission was to make higher education available to everyone (Berea was the first southern college to educate black and female students). He saw many hand-woven baskets and rugs in daily use in mountain cabins, and offered to exchange them for tuition.

As a result, interest in traditional Appalachian culture flourished. Berea College implemented an ongoing policy of waiving tuition for academically exceptional, low-income students who agree to work 10 hours a week; and the town of Berea soon blossomed as a center of folk art in woodworking, jewelry making, quilting, glass blowing and more.

Today, between 300,000 and 400,000 tourists come to Berea every year to view and purchase the work of students as well as that of widely acclaimed artists such as jeweler Ken Gastineau (see the Image Gallery). His studio is one of nine Arts Council-certified locations where visitors can watch artists at work and purchase finished items.

Gastineau likes Berea’s location — 30 miles from Lexington and also fairly close to Louisville and Cincinnati, Ohio. He also likes living in a place that’s environmentally active and is a member of the nonprofit Sustainable Berea. “Soon we will auction off 50 rain barrels that have been painted by local artists, as a way to conserve water,” he says.

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