The amount of collected knowledge and information of a community’s resources is disproportionate to its implementation within existing and future development for resiliency in the face of disruption. Natural resource data collection and the technologies used for collection should be engineered to provide a community within predetermined urban grids their environmental and economic potential. This thesis proposes the development of an ‘eco-grid’ to investigate the potential for a community’s collective energy production as a means for commodity exchange and the determined neighborhood grid’s ability to withstand disruption as a result.