Public Spaces as Home

Month

March 2012

92 posts

Mar 1, 2012159 notes
#Novi Sad #Serbia
Mar 1, 2012382 notes
#Paris #France
Feb 29, 20121,047 notes
#Huidenstraat #Amsterdam #The Netherlands
Feb 29, 201220 notes
#Paris #France
Feb 29, 2012930 notes
#Bruges #Belgium
Feb 29, 201276 notes
#Mallorca #Spain
Feb 29, 2012495 notes
#Rome #Italy

February 2012

216 posts

Feb 29, 20122 notes
#Paris #France #Eiffel Tower
Feb 29, 201222 notes
#Boston #USA
Feb 29, 201210,202 notes
venting, hypothesizing and avoiding work: It’s Not a Fairytale: Seattle to Build Nation’s First Food Forest → plentyofthyme.tumblr.com

plentyofthyme:

By Clare Leschin-Hoar February 21, 2012

Forget meadows. The city’s new park will be filled with edible plants, and everything from pears to herbs will be free for the taking.

Seattle’s vision of an urban food oasis is going forward. A seven-acre plot of land in the city’s Beacon Hill neighborhood will be planted with hundreds of different kinds of edibles: walnut and chestnut trees; blueberry and raspberry bushes; fruit trees, including apples and pears; exotics like pineapple, yuzu citrus, guava, persimmons, honeyberries, and lingonberries; herbs; and more. All will be available for public plucking to anyone who wanders into the city’s first food forest.

“This is totally innovative, and has never been done before in a public park,” Margarett Harrison, lead landscape architect for the Beacon Food Forest project, tells TakePart. Harrison is working on construction and permit drawings now and expects to break ground this summer.

The concept of a food forest certainly pushes the envelope on urban agriculture and is grounded in the concept of permaculture, which means it will be perennial and self-sustaining, like a forest is in the wild. Not only is this forest Seattle’s first large-scale permaculture project, but it’s also believed to be the first of its kind in the nation.

“The concept means we consider the soils, companion plants, insects, bugs—everything will be mutually beneficial to each other,” says Harrison.

That the plan came together at all is remarkable on its own. What started as a group project for a permaculture design course ended up as a textbook example of community outreach gone right.

“Friends of the Food Forest undertook heroic outreach efforts to secure neighborhood support. The team mailed over 6,000 postcards in five different languages, tabled at events and fairs, and posted fliers,” writes Robert Mellinger for Crosscut.

Neighborhood input was so valued by the organizers, they even used translators to help Chinese residents have a voice in the planning.

So just who gets to harvest all that low-hanging fruit when the time comes?

“Anyone and everyone,” says Harrison. “There was major discussion about it. People worried, ‘What if someone comes and takes all the blueberries?’ That could very well happen, but maybe someone needed those blueberries. We look at it this way—if we have none at the end of blueberry season, then it means we’re successful.”

Feb 29, 201214 notes
#Seattle #USA
Feb 28, 20121,244 notes
#Sicily #Syracruse #Italy
Feb 28, 201212,107 notes
#Santorini #Greece
Feb 28, 20122,097 notes
#Lisbon #Portugal
Feb 28, 2012991 notes
#Aix-en-Provence #France
Feb 28, 20121,436 notes
#Mykonos #Greece
Feb 28, 20122 notes
#Canada #Vancouver #xiemeinuo
Feb 28, 20121 note
#Canada #Vancouver #xiemeinuo
Feb 28, 201228 notes
#Vancouver #Canada
Feb 28, 20129 notes
#Vancouver #Canada #xiemeinuo
Next page →
2012 2013
  • January 186
  • February 59
  • March 31
  • April 385
  • May 14
  • June
  • July
  • August
  • September
  • October
  • November
  • December
2012 2013
  • January 171
  • February 216
  • March 92
  • April 42
  • May 28
  • June 30
  • July 33
  • August 41
  • September 30
  • October 33
  • November 30
  • December 161