Talk:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JWLRizY6G-0

What is a civic society (like Fractal)?

We use the term in a specific way for something that has two components:

Layer 1: Community-building that causes long-term bonds to form. This might include co-living, community-led classes, clubs or anything that gets people seeing one another frequently enough for relationships to form.

Layer 2: Institution-building – incubating projects and offerings which support the flourishing of the microsociety’s members or broader society.

Fractal is one such microsociety that got started in 2021 in Brooklyn’s McKibbin lofts.

Fractal

Fractal is building a replicable microsociety: a model for vibrant, relationship-driven community life that integrates housing, education, the arts, technological innovation, and economic development. Our goal is to address modern crises of loneliness and disconnection by creating enduring ecosystems of human flourishing. Fractal has been growing dramatically for the last year. Here's a current snapshot as of April 2025:

Layer 1: Communities

Communities create belonging and mutual support. They also create the high-trust collaborations capable of building social institutions for layer 2. According to the research and our experience, it takes about 100 hours over frequent meetings to form a solid adult friendship. Relationships can also be accelerated through immersive shared experiences: weekend retreats, camping, hackathons, festivals, trips, intensive workshops, etc.

Layer 2: Institutions

Founders can form a symbiotic relationship with their scenes to launch new businesses, charities, membership societies, and civic initiatives. Scenes help founders in fragile phase of going from 0 to 1 in many ways: ideation, constructive criticism, cofounder-finding, advising, first hires, low-cost venues for events and coworking, housing, volunteer labor, beta-testing, early adoption, word-of-mouth promotion, shared professional services, emotional support, and sometimes even funding. In return, founders’ institutions can provide members of their scenes with jobs, services, opportunities for skill-growth, wealth, shared resources (equipment, software, office space), and the pride of collective effort.

Why build a microsociety?

Communities – on their own – are subject to modern forces of displacement. Supplementing them with an institutional layer can dramatically strengthen the community by creating economy, organizational structures, etc. It can also harness the ambitions of the community for positive ends.