Friday, April 30, 2010

Will Allen and term ‘Urban Farm’ make Time Magazine’s list of TOP 100 in 2010

 
 

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via City Farmer News by Michael Levenston on 4/30/10

will
Photo by Jimmy Fishbein, Time

In our annual TIME 100 issue we name the people who most affect our world

By Van Jones
Time Magazine
Apr. 29, 2010

At one time, the term urban farm sounded like an oxymoron. No longer. (My red ink. Mike) A new movement is sprouting up in America's low-income neighborhoods. Some urban residents, sick of fast food and the scarcity of grocery stores, have decided to grow good food for themselves.

One of the movement's (literally) towering icons is Will Allen, 62, of Milwaukee's Growing Power Inc. His main 2-acre Community Food Center is no larger than a small supermarket. But it houses 20,000 plants and vegetables, thousands of fish, plus chickens, goats, ducks, rabbits and bees.

People come from around the world to marvel — and to learn. Says Allen: "Everybody, regardless of their economic means, should have access to the same healthy, safe, affordable food that is grown naturally."

The movement's aim is not just healthier people but a healthier planet. Food grown in cities is trucked shorter distances. Translation: more greenhouses in the 'hood equals less greenhouse gas in the air.

Just as important, farm projects grow communities and nourish hope. The best ones will produce more leaders like Allen, with his credo "Grow. Bloom. Thrive."

See article here.


 
 

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Researchers Work to Ensure Safety of Urban Gardens

 
 

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via City Farmer News by Michael Levenston on 4/29/10

gardenfire

K-State's National 'Brownfields' Research Funded by EPA

By Staff of Kansas City infoZine
April 29, 2010

Excerpt:

Manhattan, KS – infoZine – Spring is in the air and urban gardens are sprouting up all over the country.

"Increasingly, urban agriculture is being done on a community basis, rather than an individual basis," said Kansas State University assistant professor of agronomy, Ganga Hettiarachchi. "There are now more than 18,000 community gardens in the U.S. and Canada," she said, citing American Community Gardening Association data.

Some of those gardens are on once-vacant lots and land where buildings once sat. Such locations are convenient for city-dwellers and make productive use of land that otherwise might be weedy, trash-strewn lots. There is a potential downside, however.

The problem in using properties – typically called brownfields – that may have been the site of anything from auto body shops to manufacturing facilities to gas stations, is that the soil on some of those properties can pose health risks if it is contaminated with heavy metals, metalloids or organic compounds, Hettiarachchi said.

She and a team of K-State researchers are working in several states around the country to ensure that growing crops in some urban locales are safe for gardeners and consumers. Other scientists involved include Sabine Martin, brownfields coordinator and Blasé Leven, associate director, both with the Center for Hazardous Substance Research; Larry Erickson, professor in chemical engineering; Gary Pierzynski, professor and DeAnn Presley, assistant professor, both in agronomy; and Rhonda Janke, associate professor of horticulture. Pierzynski is currently serving as K-State interim dean of the College of Agriculture and director of K-State Research and Extension.

The five-year project began in January, 2009 with guaranteed funding from the Environmental Protection Agency of $750,000 and a possibility of up to $900,000.

Brownfield sites are defined by the EPA as vacant, abandoned property, the reuse of which may be complicated by the presence of a hazardous substance or contaminant, Hettiarachchi said. Examples include vacant residential lots, including those adjacent to industrial facilities and abandoned gas stations.

See the rest of the article here.


 
 

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Growing organic: integrating natural systems education at the land-grant level

 
 

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Learning opportunities expand for organic agriculture at many universities.

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Girls Inc of NYC on Rooftop Farm

 
 

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via City Farmer News by Michael Levenston on 4/29/10

Girls Inc of NYC on Rooftop Farm from Mary Matthews on Vimeo.

Girls Inc. of NYC

Girls Inc. of NYC members from the Urban Assembly Institute answered the President's call to service by volunteering at Rooftop Farms in Brooklyn, NY. The girls helped clean, plant and compost, and learned that they can help the environment by growing and eating local produce…even in New York City.

At its very heart, Girls Inc. of NYC is about offering girls the opportunity to discover their intellectual and emotional strengths. We celebrate and empower girls!

Since 1993, our programs have successfully helped urban girls grow into urbane girls who discover how limitless their opportunities are—and then go after those opportunities.

What we do

Challenge girls to discover and fulfill their potential
Foster gender equity in a positive way
Show girls that they can access all worlds, from the science lab to the boardroom
Inspire girls to take pride in success
Take a community-minded approach that inspires girls to "give back," locally and globally

See Girls Inc. of NYC website here.

See Rooftop Farms here.


 
 

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Brooklyn Grange will be a 1 acre rooftop farm

 
 

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via City Farmer News by Michael Levenston on 4/29/10

grange

Brooklyn Grange – New York

Brooklyn Grange will be a 1 acre rooftop farm situated in New York City. Such a commercially-viable rooftop farm has yet to be realized in this country. We will use simple green roof infrastructure to install over 1 million pounds of soil on the roof of an industrial building on which we will grow vegetables nine months of the year. Being in the country's largest city, the farm will create a new system of providing local communities with access to fresh, seasonal produce. We plan to expand quickly in the first few years, covering multiple acres of New York City's unused rooftops with vegetables. The business has many environmental and community benefits, and allows our city dwelling customers to know their farmer, learn where their food comes from, and become involved.


Click the image to play the video.

The farm will be run by Ben Flanner, who started and ran a proof of concept rooftop farm in the summer of '09. The beyond-organic produce will be sold directly to the community at an onsite stand, affording shoppers a direct relationship with the farm and farmers. Additional produce will be sold to a small group of market-driven local restaurants.

Our model capitalizes on an unused resource – rooftop space – and has the potential to change the way densely populated cities produce, distribute and consume food.

Your contribution will go towards ordering our lightweight rooftop soil, renting a crane to install that soil, and seeds and irrigation for our summer crops.

See Brooklyn Grange here.


 
 

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Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Do Community Gardens Change the Food System?

 
 

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via Worldchanging: Bright Green by WorldChanging Team on 4/28/10

Weighing the benefits of public garden allotments.

by Eric Hess


Spring has sprung and for thousands of northwesterners, thumbs are turning green. But for apartment or condo dwellers—like me—urban gardening can be a challenge. Many new buildings are being outfitted with rooftop gardens for tenants' use, but they're still spendy and scarce; most of us will have to look to home-owning friends with a few square feet to spare or vie with neighbors for a plot in high-demand community gardens.

How does a community garden work? Typically, the city or program (some are run by private developers) sets aside a patch of land—portions of parks, undeveloped lots, etc—ranging anywhere from 2,000-200,000 sq. ft. in size. The land is parceled into individual plots ranging from under 100 sq. ft. to over 400. Individuals pay under $100/year for a plot. Each location may have different specific requirements, but they generally make sure gardeners are actually using the plot.

I've heard a lot of hype in the last couple of years, and wondering where the vegetable starts on my windowsill will be planted next month got me thinking more about community gardens in the Northwest: How common are they? And how competitive can they really be?

Just a quick perusal of city gardening sites confirmed what I'd heard through the grapevine—there are far more green thumbs than available plots, leaving some waiting for as many as five years.

Here's a quick run-down of where the Northwest's three major metropolises stand on community gardens:

* Vancouver, BC (4.3 plots per 1,000 people): The Community Gardens program has expanded greatly in the last four years—from 950 plots to 2,500 across 50 gardens. The city also has a great program helping to match garden-owners with neighbors looking for an empty patch of soil.

* Portland, Oregon (5.2 plots per 1,000 people): The city's Community Gardens program hosts 32 gardens, used by about 3,000 gardeners (with another 1,000 on the waiting list). Additionally, the city sponsors programs to connect urban gardeners with surplus food with families in need, and to teach youth about gardening and food production.

* Seattle, WA (6.3 plots per 1,000 people): Heralded as one of the US's best urban gardening programs, the P-Patch program has more than 70 gardens over 23 acres—used by 3,800 urban gardeners with another 2,000 on wait lists (which take anywhere from three months to five years). Over half of the gardeners are low income, and the program donates 7-10 tons of fresh produce each year through Solid Ground's Lettuce Link program.

Yet despite all the positive press and demand, I have to question the ability of p-patches to make a large impact on our food systems. A dedicated community garden owner on 200 square feet might produce a substantial portion of their vegetables (see end note), but a hobbyist on 90 square feet may simply contribute some tasty additions to their spring and summer suppers. And with an average of only 5 plots per 1,000 residents of the biggest Northwest cities, the programs have a long way to go before they are a major part of our food system or a solution to poor nutrition.

Instead, I think of community gardens along the same lines as food carts—maybe the measurable benefits aren't so great, but they have an important place in a vibrant urban culture: they often fill land that would otherwise go unused; provide green spaces in some of our cities' densest neighborhoods; contribute a significant chunk of fresh, healthy produce for those who otherwise might lack access; give kids hands-on experience to understand where food comes from and how ecosystems work; and, as I mentioned before, add a certain je ne sais quoi to dense, urban living by providing non-homeowners with one of the more fun advantages of having a yard.

Perhaps most importantly, there's an enhanced sense of community when a group of neighbors get together and dig into the earth. Certainly the Victory Gardens of both World Wars provided a morale booster to civilians who felt like they were contributing to war effort (if Wikipedia is to be trusted—and it probably isn't—they contributed 40 percent of the US's vegetable consumption). Maybe community gardens provide a similar morale boost for those engaged in the slow-motion sustainability revolution.

Unfortunately, with a waiting time of at least a year, it doesn't look like a p-patch will be the answer for my veggies this year. But it's good to see such enthusiasm for public green spaces. I'm curious to hear if any of our readers have a community garden plot—and if so, what you think about it?


*End note: A quick search suggests gardens yield about 0.6 lbs of vegetables per square foot per season, and Americans consume 428 lbs of vegetables per capita per year, on average.

Seedlings image courtesy of Jackal of All Trades and Gardeners picture courtesy of sbcg08 via Flickr under the Creative Commons License. P-Patch picture is of the Belltown p-patch, taken by author.

This article originally appeared on Sightline.org


For more resources and information on urban gardening at Worldchanging see:
Community Land Sharing
Urban Farming Takes Root in Surprising Ways

Help us change the world - DONATE NOW!

(Posted by WorldChanging Team in Food and Farming at 11:20 AM)


 
 

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Cities Grapple with Rise of Urban Agriculture

 
 

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via City Farmer News by Michael Levenston on 4/28/10

growpittsPhoto by growpittsburgh.

Pittsburgh plans for urban farmers

By Erika Beras
Ohio River Radio Consortium
2010-04-28

Excerpt:

PITTSBURG, PA (WEKU) – Urban agriculture is growing. And its not just city-dwellers frequenting farmer's markets for their vegetables, eggs and honey – more of them are interested in growing or cultivating it themselves. That's leaving officials scrambling for ways to regulate the new farmer that's cropping up in American cities, farmers like Jana Thompson.

Thompson grew up on farms. Seven years ago she moved to Pittsburgh. Although she had a garden she missed having a connection to nature. So, first came the bees. (Nat Sound from the Hives) 70,000 of them, in open-bottomed hive boxes on her roof. Then came the chickens – three Salmon Bantams. (Nat Sound of Chickens) Next, she wants to raise rabbits for meat. But then she received an email with some troubling news.

"The first code the city proposed everything I'm doing here would have become illegal," says Thompson.

As an urbanite with a growing farm-stock, Jana Thompson isn't alone. As a nationwide consciousness about where food comes from increases more city-residents are growing their own food – and keeping farm animals. Which is leaving city officials struggling to figure out how to codify the practice.

"In order to protect the people that were doing urban agriculture and also the neighbors of those people doing urban agriculture we thought it was the perfect time to start going down creating an ordinance for urban agriculture. Before, well actually currently there is nothing on the books for urban agriculture. And that's pretty prevalent in a lot of cities"

That's Jason Kimbitsis, a senior city planner who's working on the urban agriculture code. When the proposed one was released earlier this year, there was a bit of an outcry from the urban agriculture community. The required square footage per chicken and the distances bees needed to be from a neighbor's house would have nearly negated the chance for anyone to practice urban agriculture in the densely packed, narrow streets that make up the majority of Pittsburgh's landscape.

See the rest of the story here.


 
 

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Saturday, April 17, 2010

Inka Biospheric Systems: A Modern Vertical School Garden


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Inka Biospheric Systems: A Modern Vertical School Garden



There is now an Inka Biospheric Systems vertical garden installed at Sanchez Elementary School in San Francisco. It was good to see this sign of modernity in the school gardening movement.

In my view the students at this school will learn much more about plant science and urban food production then they do when growing in the dirt.

Systems of this type have broad applicability in space-short urban schools all across America. Kudos to Inka Biospheric Systems and Slow Food San Francisco for their involvement.

via www.slowfoodusa.org



The soil-less vertical garden, which was installed by Inka Biospheric Systems and can be mounted on a chain-link fence, is an option for campuses where space is an issue. As well, solar panels and a wind turbine will power the circulation of nutrient-enhanced water, adding another level of sustainability to this project. Students at Sanchez Elementary will monitor the garden's energy use, water nutrient levels, and produce outputs over the course of the spring and compile the results in May. The way that the Sanchez Elementary School administration has embraced the garden project makes the school a model on which Slow Food San Francisco can base future Slow Food in Schools projects.






Monday, April 5, 2010

City buses feature photos of local food and farmers

 
 

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via City Farmer News by Michael Levenston on 4/4/10

busartNaomi Johnson's photos of local food and farmers

Transit's 'art buses' make their debut in Asheville, North Carolina

Mountain Xpress
03/27/2010

Three Asheville area artists have won the city's first "Art on Transit" competition, the Parks, Recreation and Cultural Arts Department announced recently. Each artist will be awarded a $750 honorarium, and their design will grace both sides of a single bus. The winners were: Ray Noland's "Jeweled Forest," a color-splashed, whimsical forest; Naomi Johnson's photos of local food and farmers; and Nina Ruffini's "Message," featuring bunnies adrift in boats.

A five-member jury, which included a bus driver, met and considered more than 60 submissions. The jury picked six finalists and suggested the three winners, which were unanimously confirmed by Asheville's Public Art Board.

busart3

The work will remain on display for at least four months, according to Diane Ruggerio, the city's superintendent of cultural arts. Ruggerio said she hopes "Art on Transit" will become an annual project.

See more about the project here.

See more photos of Naomi Johnson's images on the buses here.

See more here.


 
 

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