Regenerative Call

Let’s co-create a curated platform for
regenerative experiences

We are building a tool that connects people with experiences that regenerate the territory. For it to work in practice — not only in theory — we need to understand how those who care for the place actually work.
Participating means helping us design it with real information. No costs, no exclusivity, and no obligation to join later.
If you wish, you can also send us information so we can create a curated profile of your experience on our website — as an open prototype, at no cost.

(2-3 minutes). No commitment

What are we looking for?

We are looking for regenerative experiences that can be shared with visitors

If your experience emerges from working with the territory, we want to learn about it. It doesn’t matter whether you call it community-based, educational, environmental, cultural, or sustainable.


The important thing is not whether you already receive visitors, but whether tourism can explain, support, or strengthen that work without distorting it. We are building a curated, educational platform with measurable impact, so that regenerative tourism can truly regenerate.


Participating in the pilot does not oblige you to join the platform when it is launched.

Regenerative tourism experiences

Educational visits, guided walks, territory-based accommodations, cultural activities, environmental experiences, interpretive trails, workshops, tastings, educational boating, among others.

If you already share your work with visitors, we want to help you reach people who truly value it.

Regenerative experiences that can open to tourism

Conservation projects, environmental education initiatives, research labs, and agricultural or cultural cooperatives that could responsibly receive visitors.

If tourism can strengthen your project without changing what makes it valuable, we want to hear from you and design it well from the start.

No commitment

No exclusivity

No costs during the pilot phase

What do we offer?

What you receive by joining the pilot

We are co-creating a curated platform of regenerative experiences, with measurable impact and prepared visitors. During this stage, you will be able to participate in defining how this work is selected, communicated, and evaluated. In addition to co-creation, you will have access to:

A curated page of your experience on our website, as part of the platform prototype.


It explains your work clearly, attracts aligned visitors, and does not require you to join commercially afterward.

Real participation in how regenerative tourism is communicated and evaluated
We are not asking you to validate a finished idea. We want those who already care for the territory to define it with us.

Priority when we launch the platform
Those who participated in our first survey maintain lifetime access, as promised. Those who join now will have priority to appear on and access the platform from the beginning, with early visibility and conditions defined together with you.

Clear and fair conditions co-created with you, not imposed.

 We do not work with commissions decided externally. The pilot allows us to define a viable, transparent, and fair economic model together with those doing the work in the territory.

No exclusivity, no costs, and no obligation to join afterward.
Participating does not commit you to using the platform when it launches. There are no costs during the pilot, no exclusivity agreements, and no mandatory contracts afterward. Only if the project makes sense for you will you be able to choose to join.

(2-3 minutes). No commitment

What do we ask in return?

What are we trying to build?
(and what we do not want to do)

What we are looking for

  • A curated platform that showcases only experiences with real regenerative practices.
  • Honest information that explains the work behind each experience (without empty marketing).
  • Prepared visitors, who arrive understanding the value of the work rather than behaving as consumers.
  • Measurable impact, defined together with you: ecological, cultural, economic, and social.
  • Fair conditions, including a commission agreed upon with those participating in the pilot.

These definitions will be part of the pilot—they are not final.

WHAT WE DO NOT WANT TO BUILD

  • Mass tourism or volume-based tourism.
  • Superficial certifications or labels used to “sell green.”
  • Classifying categories imposed from the outside.
  • Exclusivity or contracts that restrict your project.
  • Commissions imposed without dialogue with the experiences.

We are not trying to “add experiences.” We are trying to design a useful tool together with them.

Why participate?

Before building technology,
we want to build clarity

Because tourism should not decide from the outside what the territory ought to express. We need to listen to those who care for it, research it, and sustain it every day.
The platform only makes sense if it serves the people who bring it to life.

(2-3 minutes). No commitment​

FAQs

What you need to know before joining

What do I gain by participating in the pilot?

Your experience can directly influence how regenerative tourism is selected, communicated, and measured.
If the platform becomes a reality, those who participate in the pilot will have priority to be part of the launch, with conditions defined together with you.

No. Participating simply means responding to the pilot consultation and helping us design the project.
It does not create contracts, exclusivity, or future obligations.

No. There are no costs during the pilot.
If we later decide to build the platform, the business model will be defined together with those who participated, including fair and transparent commissions to cover operational costs and continue measuring impact.
We do not impose percentages in advance.

Experiences that emerge from working with the territory: cultural, educational, environmental, community-based, agricultural, conservation-related, or combinations of these.
They may be:

  • Tourism-ready today (visits, trails, lodging, workshops, tastings, guided activities, educational experiences, among others).

  • With tourism potential, if tourism can strengthen the work without distorting it.

It is an experience that not only avoids harm but contributes to regenerating something real in the territory (ecosystems, living culture, community relationships, local economies, education, or conservation).
It is not defined by slogans; it is demonstrated through real practices.

Yes. The pilot also seeks to understand how responsible tourism can support projects that do not yet receive visitors. We want to design a gradual approach, without pressure and without distorting the original work.

No. We are not looking to classify, certify, or impose categories from the outside. The platform will not request exclusivity or supervise your project; it will make it visible and explain it according to how you live and practice it.

No. We prefer low volume and high value, with people who arrive understanding the work rather than consuming it.

Our Blog

Ideas to transform tourism

This space brings together the questions, observations, and challenges that arise as we explore what it truly means to travel regeneratively. We seek to understand what it takes to make it possible across different territories and contexts.

Tourism ethics: rethinking the “customer first” mindset

Regenerative tourism: does the customer always come first? Rethinking tourism beyond easy consumption: For decades, the tourism industry was built on a powerful and convenient principle: “the customer is always right.” This logic turned travelers into omnipotent consumers, accustomed

Travel as medicine: how regenerative tourism heals you and revitalizes the destination

Travel as medicine: when healing yourself also regenerates the place you visit In recent years, something profound has begun to shift in the way we travel. We are no longer driven only by leisure, escape, or perfect photographs. More

The Paradox of Authenticity in Regenerative Tourism

In 1973, a student stood up in the middle of a class at the University of California and shouted in frustration: “We are all tourists!”