I’ve been rained out of the Fiat mines today, and rainy days always turn into reflection days for me.

Today, my thoughts keep drifting to my dream citadel in the mountains.

Citadels were one of the first concepts that really grabbed me when I found Bitcoin. The idea of a sovereign place: rooted in sound money, real work, and real community; struck a deep chord. It still does. It’s a big part of why I keep stacking. I don’t have enough corn to build one yet, but that doesn’t stop me. In the meantime, I’m building the skills, habits, and relationships I’ll need to make it possible. And honestly, just thinking about it has become a kind of practice. A mental blueprint I revise and refine with each passing season.

Lately, I’ve been asking myself: Would it need to be near water for hydroelectric? Could solar and wind cover the rest? How much infrastructure is “enough” before it stops feeling free and starts feeling synthetic? Can you automate and digitize a space without losing the soul of it?

To me, a citadel isn’t about retreating from the world; it’s about building something better in it. I’ve always believed humans are like bacteria on this planet, but we get to choose: are we healing the system or making it sicker? If I build a citadel, I want it to be regenerative, not just sustainable. A place where the land is healthier, the air cleaner, the water purer because we’re there, not despite it. Just because it’s a sanctuary doesn’t mean it can’t also be a living tribute to the wild.

There’s a lot of fear out there around smart cities: total control, surveillance, algorithmic life, but the answer isn’t just to reject it. It’s to build something equally ambitious, rooted in different values. Citadels, at their best, are that counterweight. If the future is going to extremes, we need to meet it with our own. The more centralized and technocratic the world becomes, the harder I’ll push to build something sovereign, human-scaled, and rooted in truth.

So I’m curious…does anyone else still dream of citadels? And beyond the obvious appeal of security or community, what draws you in most? For me, it’s the chance to live in alignment: with the land, with people I trust, and with principles that don’t change with the market cycle.

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Love how you’re framing the citadel not as escape, but as a regenerative act. It’s not just about surviving the collapse; it’s about planting seeds for something better…. And I’m in

YES, this is our world too! It’s only their system that’s collapsing. Citadels aren’t an escape…they’re the epicenters of what comes next. Not a retreat, but a beginning!

Love it

i'd agree with all you've said, but maybe citadel isn't the right word to describe it?

an image search gives you the impressiin of a world full of isolated bunkers, but thats not how you can compete with smart cities.

we need the focus on interconnectedness of those "citadels" and imagery or metaphors which inspire people for that, because otherwise the smart cities will suck up one citqdel after another - divide and conquer.

I dont know a good answer, but some infrastructure is well networked/connected and at the same time physically isolated or standalone. For example a scientific research station.

Sadly not decentralized, there are franchises too (e.g. 7-Eleven, McDonalds,...) or Remote Work Offices. Also Warehouses.

I wouldnt recommend any of the above over citqdel, but citadel might not be the best either...

Nexus? ...importanr point in a web of connections

Beacon? ...a signal reqching out across space

Sentinel? ....watchtower, but part of a network

To me, nexus seems best 😁

You make a good point. When I first heard the term citadel, I also associated it with a kind of negative, bunker like image, but it was the word everyone was using to describe the idea, so I just went with it. I’d definitely be open to calling it something else if there’s a better fit.

I hadn’t considered smart cities as a direct threat to citadels, but you’re right: centralized systems could absorb isolated ones if we’re not careful. Any real alternative would need to include safeguards against that kind of takeover.

In my original post, I only talked about one citadel because even building a single one feels like a huge goal. But if I ever pull it off, I’d absolutely want to help others build their own. I imagine I’d always call the first one; probably near my hometown, “home,” but the vision goes beyond that. I’m passionate about the whole idea, and I want to help others to experience it too if I can!

I want in. Except I’m more of an island than a mountain type.

To each their own! I think an island citadel sounds really cool too. I’d love to help build one; even if it wasn’t my full-time home, it’d be amazing to have a place like that to visit and spend time with based friends, or even future friends I haven’t met yet.

The world could use as many regenerative citadels as possible; every one of them would make an unique difference!

This is how I know I'm in the right place, because it's like you just plucked out some of the thoughts that occupy my mind the most these days.

I've been round and round in my mind on all sorts of problems and possibilities for my own citadel, and the necessity for a larger network, but where I'm most focused now is the necessity for slow, sustainable growth with people around me who I trust.

It's just a dream now, but I have some concrete ideas in mind that are very achievable, which will get the dream started.

I’m glad you feel the same; great minds really do think alike!

Nothing good comes easy, and nothing worth keeping comes quickly. Building something meaningful takes time, but it’s always worth it.

I’m rooting for your citadel. The more minds working on these visions, the stronger and better they’ll become!