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Asphalt gardening now a growing trend
The Plain Dealer August 14, 2007 By Peter Krouse
Where most people see asphalt, Maurice Small sees vegetables. Rows of them, ripening under a hot city sun.
His idea of a garden spot is a vacant parking lot.
Forget about tearing up the blacktop to reach the soil below. The
earth could be contaminated. His theory is to leave the asphalt alone
and build raised beds. The asphalt then becomes a barrier against
whatever nastiness might be lurking below.
The way Small sees it, most available green space in the city is
being gobbled up for new houses, so why not take back that which has
already been paved over?
Small is like the Pied Piper of asphalt gardening, promoting its
benefits around the city. He recently took Andrew Watterson,
sustainability programs manager for Cleveland, on a tour of urban
gardens, both asphalt and the more traditional. The potential benefits
of asphalt gardens, Watterson said, include limiting the amount of
storm water going into sewer systems.
Proponents
also assert that asphalt gardens are a way to reduce the "heat island
effect" created by the sun pounding on the pavement, and a means to
bring fresh produce to parts of the community that might be underserved
by grocery stores.
For a business or an apartment complex not using all of their
parking lot, it`s something they might want to consider, Watterson said.
The extent of interest in asphalt gardening is new to real estate
developer Michael Chesler, "but anything you can do to soften the
hardness of an urban landscape is a good thing," he said.
Great cities are known for their green space, said Chesler, who
believes the benefit of the gardens will be purely aesthetic. But
that`s OK.
"I think it probably does relax us all," he said.
And if anybody`s interested, he has a parking lot -- maybe one-third
of an acre -- beside the former Packard Auto Depot at 5000 Prospect
Ave. that might provide someone with a nice site for an asphalt garden.
Kate Thomas, nutritionist at Neighborhood Family Practice, oversees
six raised beds in a corner of the Ridgeway Plaza parking lot on Ridge
Road near Denison Avenue. They occupy a fenced area beside the
Brightside Academy, a day-care center.
Each bed is surrounded by cinder blocks and has a growing area of
about three feet by eight feet. Cabbage, collard greens, squash,
tomatoes and more grow there. Even the cinder block cavities serve as
miniature beds. Many contain marigolds to keep bugs away, although
aphids have already done a number on the cabbage.
A grant from the Cleveland Foundation helped get it built. Water for
the garden comes from four barrels that collect storm runoff from the
adjacent building. Thomas plans to use the garden to promote better
nutrition, even giving some of the produce to her patients.
Meanwhile, on the other side of town, sisters Jessica and Emmy Levine have a more commercial proposition on their hands.
They already have two traditional gardens, one on the West Side of
Cleveland and the other in Avon, and sell their produce at the Tremont
Farmers Market on Saturdays. But this year they have added an asphalt
garden on Stanard Avenue, near St. Clair Avenue and East 55th Street.
A couple feet of wood chips blanket a portion of the lot. A layer of
cardboard and newspaper separates the chips from straw, organic matter
and topsoil. Eventually the sisters hope to have more than a half acre
in vegetables.
The Levines were inspired to look in the city by another asphalt
gardener, Meagen Kresge, who along with two partners has started a plot
on the West Side. Kresge said she even hopes to raise chickens at her
site, using their droppings as fertilizer.
The Levines pay a small fee to the Goodrich-Gannett Neighborhood
Center to use the Stanard Avenue lot and will soon have their own
metered water connection. At the moment, they have to extend a hose
about 300 feet through a neighbor`s backyard to get water from
Goodrich-Gannett.
Ultimately, they hope their passion for growing things will allow them to do it full-time.
"It`s a different way to kind of think about vacant, idle land,"
said Brad Masi, executive director of the New Agrarian Center in
Oberlin. Among its programs is the federally funded City Fresh
community food project, which helps bring locally grown produce into
the inner city. Small, who likes to wear his 10-year-old dreadlocks in
a heap on top of his head, is a coordinator for City Fresh.
On a recent hot, steamy afternoon, Small took several teenagers
working for the City Fresh youth program to help Thomas at her garden
on Ridge Road. They painted a picnic table and hauled water in 5-gallon
buckets from rain barrels nearby. Others were assigned to aphid patrol,
smushing the tiny gray-brown dots on the leaves where they were
feasting.
At one point Thomas showed Shammiah Reed, 7, who was there with her mother, Victoria, how to pluck collard greens.
"Your mom needs a lot to make a pot," she said, "so snap off a bunch."
Holly Harlan, president of Entrepreneurs for Sustainability,
believes the asphalt gardens could be the precursor to even more
sophisticated agriculture in the city, such as energy-efficient
greenhouses, but that means figuring out how they can be supported.
"I don`t have the answer," she said. "That`s why we have to attract more people with a business mindset to these challenges." To read full article, click here. © The Plain Dealer
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