
PROJECT GREEN ZONE
Building Modern Civic Communication and Engagement for All

What is Project Green Zone?
Project Green Zone delivers modern civic infrastructure for District One through American innovation and self-reliance. We're building digital tools that empower residents, support local businesses, and strengthen community bonds—funded through our own efforts, not taxpayer dollars.
Website
Newsletter
1M aiWh
Health AI
Center
Engagement
Plus: AI Community Health Worker Assistant (30% of aiWh)
Delivered through Atlas - a civic-first AI browser
Problem
90% of all resident associations and organizations are abandoned due to economic challenges. Due to recent advances in AI, communities lack modern infrastructure and education to connect residents, share information, and coordinate community efforts.
Solution
A modern, self-funded website serving 137,000 residents and millions of visitors with community news, events, resources, and civic engagement tools—built on American values of self-reliance and innovation.
Problem
Due to challenges with capital and resource allocation, neighborhoods and hyperlocal information become fragmented and lost in communication.
Solution
The Green Zone Newsletter delivers weekly community news, civic updates, and local stories directly to residents—keeping our community informed and connected.
Problem
Less than 20% of District One residents have adopted AI technology. The digital divide leaves our community behind in the AI revolution, limiting access to modern tools and opportunities.
Solution
Gridnet has dedicated 1 million aiWh to power free and affordable AI services for District One through the Atlas browser—bridging the digital divide with community AI infrastructure.
Problem
Community health workers serving District One are underfunded and overworked, causing resident support to fall short. 64% of our population is Hispanic and needs multilingual health resources.
Solution
An AI assistant (30% of our aiWh allocation) helps residents find health information, services, and guidance in English and Spanish—expanding capacity without replacing human workers.
Problem
District One does not have a community center. Residents lack a dedicated gathering space for meetings, classes, events, and community programs.
Solution
We're building a community-owned center funded entirely through Project Green Zone revenue—no taxpayer dollars. Residents are shaping the vision through democratic input.
Problem
Launching and managing a resident association is very difficult in District One. Traditional civic engagement models struggle to reach and activate our diverse, urban community.
Solution
Build agentic tools that make it easy for residents to participate, support concerns, and shape their community's future—democracy in action.
Built on American Values
"This supports residents."
"This helps community health workers."
"This brings responsible AI into civic life."
"This costs the city nothing."
"This is locally rooted and scalable."
"This empowers self-reliance."
No controversy • No worker replacement • No surveillance • No taxpayer funding
Building America's First Civic AI Infrastructure
Join us in creating a model for the nation—where technology serves people, communities stay strong, and American values guide innovation.