The development of Tree Mountain took 14 years from the
original design concept in 1982, to its commissioning by the Finnish government
at the Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro in 1992— to its completion in 1996
in middle Finland. A mountain needed to be built to design specifications,
which by itself took over four years and was the restitution work of a mine
that had destroyed the land through resource extraction. The process of
bioremediation restores the land from resource extraction use to one in harmony
with nature, in this case, the creation of a virgin forest. The planting of
trees holds the land from erosion, enhances oxygen production and provides home
for wildlife. This takes time and it is one of the reasons why Tree Mountain must remain undisturbed
for centuries. The certificate the planters received are numbered and reach 400
years into the future as it takes that long for the ecosystem to establish
itself. It is an inheritable document that connects the eleven thousand
planters and their descendents reaching into millions, connected by their
trees. This family is the original green generation, the term that became so
popular recently in people’s terminology. This family from around the world are
proud custodians of the trees that bear their names and grow through the
centuries to a lush manmade virgin forest. Tree
Mountain is a collaborative work, from its intricate landscaping and
forestry to the funding and contractual agreements for its strange, unheard-of
land-use of four centuries. The collaboration expands as eleven thousand people
come together to plant the trees that bear their names and remain their
property through succeeding generations. The trees can change
ownership—people can leave their tree to their heirs, or transfer it by
other means, even be buried under it—but Tree Mountain itself can never be owned or sold, nor can the trees
be moved from the forest. The trees are made by nature, the mathematical
positioning created by the human intellect to form a true alliance of man and
nature.
© Agnes Denes
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