:Community gardening in the United States
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{{Main|Community gardening}}
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Community gardens in the United States benefit both gardeners and society at large. Community gardens provide fresh produce to gardeners and their friends and neighbors. They provide a place of connection to nature and to other people. In a wider sense, community gardens provide green space, a habitat for insects and animals, sites for gardening education, and beautification of the local area. Community gardens provide access to land to those who otherwise could not have a garden, such as apartment-dwellers, the elderly, and the homeless. Many gardens resemble European allotment gardens, with plots or boxes where individuals and families can grow vegetables and flowers, including a number which began as victory gardens during World War II.{{Cite web|title=A century later, victory gardens connect Americans again|url=https://abcnews.go.com/Lifestyle/wireStory/century-victory-gardens-connect-americans-70265185|access-date=2021-03-16|website=ABC News|language=en}} Other gardens are worked as community farms with no individual plots at all, similar to urban farms.
Overview
File:South Central Farm 6.jpg in Los Angeles, California]]
A community garden is any piece of land gardened by a group of people.American Community Gardening Association. Website: {{cite web |url=http://www.communitygarden.org/learn |title=American Community Gardening Association |access-date=2011-02-27 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110307123844/http://www.communitygarden.org/learn/ |archive-date=2011-03-07 }} The majority of gardens in community gardening programs are collections of individual garden plots, frequently between {{convert|3|x|3|m|ft|abbr=on}} and {{convert|6|x|6|m|ft|abbr=on}}. This holds true whether they are sponsored by public agencies, city departments, large non-profits, or (most commonly) a coalition of different entities and groups. Some gardens have common-area features, such as orchards, beehives, and plots that are tended by children or volunteers for the community.
Whether the garden is run as a co-op by the gardeners themselves (common in New York City, Boston and other East Coast cities), or managed by a public or non-profit agency, plot holders are typically asked to pay a fee each year and to abide by a set of rules. Fees typically cover water costs, insurance, and infrastructure repairs.
Many gardens have communal activities such as meetings, workdays, fundraisers, and social gatherings. Community garden organizers typically say that "growing community" is as important as growing vegetables; or, as the American Community Gardening Association (ACGA) puts it: "In community gardening, 'community' comes first."
Community gardening in the United States overlaps, to some extent, with the related but distinct movement to encourage local food production, local farmers' markets, and community supported agriculture farms (CSAs). Leases and rules prevent most, though not all, community gardeners from selling their produce commercially, as many community gardens are viewed (and are often set up as) nonprofit organizations. However, such gardens may donate fresh fruits and vegetables to local food pantries, cooperatives, and homeless members of their community.
Depending on their size, community gardens host local farmers markets where the farmers provide space-intensive crops such as corn or potatoes. In turn, small farmers can reach a wider audience and consumer base by drawing on community gardeners and their contacts. Although the two approaches are distinct, both can be effective ways to produce local food in urban areas, safeguard green space, and contribute to food security. Community gardens also increase environmental aesthetics, promote neighborhood attachment, and social involvement.{{cite journal | pmid = 21680931 | doi=10.2105/AJPH.2010.300111 | volume=101 | title=The influence of social involvement, neighborhood aesthetics, and community garden participation on fruit and vegetable consumption | pmc=3134498 | year=2011 | journal=Am J Public Health | pages=1466–73 | last1 = Litt | first1 = JS | last2 = Soobader | first2 = MJ | last3 = Turbin | first3 = MS | last4 = Hale | first4 = JW | last5 = Buchenau | first5 = M | last6 = Marshall | first6 = JA| issue=8 }}{{cite journal | pmid = 20184990 | doi=10.1016/j.jada.2009.11.023 | volume=110 | title=Review of the nutritional implications of farmers' markets and community gardens: a call for evaluation and research efforts | date=March 2010 | journal=J Am Diet Assoc | pages=399–408 | last1 = McCormack | first1 = LA | last2 = Laska | first2 = MN | last3 = Larson | first3 = NI | last4 = Story | first4 = M| issue=3 }}{{cite journal | pmid = 19167954 | doi=10.1016/j.jada.2008.10.051 | volume=109 | title=Impact of garden-based youth nutrition intervention programs: a review | date=February 2009 | journal=J Am Diet Assoc | pages=273–80 | last1 = Robinson-O'Brien | first1 = R | last2 = Story | first2 = M | last3 = Heim | first3 = S| issue=2 }}
Similar to the practice of reclaiming bombed areas for community gardens (practiced during WWII in the ghettos of Eastern Europe), community groups have reclaimed abandoned or vacant lots for garden plots in American inner-cities. In these cases, groups have subsequently leased from a municipality that claims the property, or claimed squatter's rights or a right to subsistence not currently recognized by the legal system.{{cite web|url=http://www.treehugger.com/files/2006/06/south_central_farm_shut_down.php|title=LA's South Central Farm Shut Down and Bulldozed|work=TreeHugger }}
Community gardens often face pressure due to economic development, rising land values, and decreased city government budgets. In some cases, they have responded to the changes by forming nonprofit organizations to provide assistance and by building gardens on city park spaces and school yards.{{cite book|last=Hess|first=David J.|title=Localist Movements in a Global Economy: Sustainability, Justice, and Urban Development in the United States|year=2009|publisher=MIT Press|location=Cambridge, MA|isbn=978-0-262-01264-5}}{{cite web|last=Hess|first=David J.|title=Case Studies of Community Gardens|url=http://www.davidjhess.org/sustlocCasesTOC.html|access-date=22 July 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130130043602/http://www.davidjhess.org/sustlocCasesTOC.html|archive-date=2013-01-30|url-status=dead}} Another source of pressure in some locations is the cost of water, one of the gardens' main expenses.
History
The history of community gardening in the US dates back to the early 18th century, when Moravians created a community garden in the community of Bethabara, near modern Winston-Salem, North Carolina. This garden is still active and open for visitors today. Community gardening was also a practice of Native American tribes and First Nations peoples, who likely gardened with a community approach for generations before the arrival of immigrants. Exemplifying this, Gilbert L. Wilson's book Buffalo Bird Woman's Garden{{Cite book|last=Waheenee,?-1932|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/794700971|title=Buffalo Bird Woman's garden : agriculture of the Hidatsa Indians|date=1987|publisher=Minnesota Historical Society Press|others=Gilbert Livingstone Wilson|isbn=978-0-87351-660-0|location=St. Paul|oclc=794700971}} paints a picture of gardens among the Hidatsa.
In the 1890s, Detroit became the first city to use vacant lots for a municipally sponsored urban gardening programs. Known as “Pingree’s Potato Patches” after Mayor Hazen Pingree, the program was formed as a response to the 1893 economic recession which left the city's industrial laborers unemployed. Observing the success of Detroit's gardening program, Boston and San Francisco later adopted similar programs. The latter cities' programs, however, were temporary programs aimed at helping the poor.{{Cite web|url=https://communityofgardens.si.edu/exhibits/show/historycommunitygardens/vacantlot|title=Vacant Lot Gardens : Grown from the Past: A Short History of Community Gardening in the United States|website=Community of Gardens|language=en|access-date=2019-04-29}}{{Cite journal|last1=Milburn|first1=Lee-Anne S.|last2=Vail|first2=Brooke Adams|date=2010|title=Sowing the Seeds of Success: Cultivating a Future for Community Gardens|journal=Landscape Journal|volume=29|issue=1|pages=71–89|issn=0277-2426|jstor=43323865|doi=10.3368/lj.29.1.71|s2cid=109193815}}
As adult interest in gardens began to wane, there was a renewed interest in children's gardening with the advocacy of Fannie Griscom Parsons in New York City. In DeWitt Clinton Park, Parsons created a large educational garden in the early 1900s as a way to "show how willing and anxious children are to work, and to teach them in their work some necessary civic virtues; private care of public property, economy, honesty, application concentration, self-government, civic pride, justice, the dignity of labor, and the love of nature by opening to their minds the little we know of her mysteries, more wonderful than any fairy tale.”{{Cite web|url=https://communityofgardens.si.edu/exhibits/show/historycommunitygardens/schoolgardens|title=School Gardens : Grown from the Past: A Short History of Community Gardening in the United States|website=Community of Gardens|language=en|access-date=2019-04-29}}
During World War I and World War II, Victory gardens were planted on public land to meet some of the domestic need for food.{{Cite web|url=https://communityofgardens.si.edu/exhibits/show/historycommunitygardens/wartimegardens|title=Wartime Gardens : Grown from the Past: A Short History of Community Gardening in the United States|website=Community of Gardens|language=en|access-date=2019-04-29}} The term "community garden" came into use to describe collectively grown gardens and gardens with individual plots during World War I.
In the 1960s and 70s, community gardens were a result of grassroots organizations that promoted environmental stewardship and revitalized urban neighborhoods.{{Cite web|url=https://communityofgardens.si.edu/exhibits/show/historycommunitygardens/environmentalaction|title=Environmental Action and Urban Revitalization : Grown from the Past: A Short History of Community Gardening in the United States|website=Community of Gardens|language=en|access-date=2019-04-29}} In 1978, the American Community Gardening Association (ACGA) was formed to share information and resources among community gardeners and to form a nationwide network of said gardeners.{{Cite web|url=https://communitygarden.org/mission/history/|title=History of the ACGA - American Community Gardening Association|last=Park|first=American Community Gardening Association 3271 Main Street College|website=American Community Garden Association|language=en-US|access-date=2019-04-29|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150907021353/https://communitygarden.org/mission/history/|archive-date=2015-09-07|url-status=dead}}
From the mid-1970s through the early 1990s, community gardening, in a select number of major American cities, enjoyed federal financial support,{{Cite journal|last=Birky|first=Joshua|date=2009-01-30|title=The Modern Community Garden Movement in the United States: Its Roots, its Current Condition and its Prospects for the Future|url=https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/1860|journal=Graduate Theses and Dissertations}} though many programs struggled to find funding. The loss of the federal program increased the challenge of finding funding to support gardens, as the dues rarely cover all the garden's expenses.
In social movements
Community gardens are seen as valuable in food systems movements such as food justice, food sovereignty, food security, and agroecology. Community urban farms also provide a medium for gender empowerment, racial inclusion, and alternative power structures. Food system movements are happening beyond the United States, transnationally in the Global North and the Global South in regions of Latin America, Asia, and Africa.{{Cite book |last=Altieri |first=Miguel |title=Agroecology and the Search for a Truly Sustainable Agriculture |publisher=United Nations Environment Programme Environmental Training Network for Latin America and the Caribbean |year=2005 |isbn=9789687913353}} The globalization of food production in the previous century has also globalized and connected community organizations and international NGOs working on food systems and food sovereignty.{{Cite book |last=Reed |first=Matthew |url=https://www.worldcat.org/title/501320926 |title=Rebels for the soil: the rise of the global organic food and farming movement |date=2010 |publisher=Earthscan |isbn=978-1-84407-597-3 |location=London; Washington, DC |oclc=501320926}}
Benefits of gardening
= Cultural =
Community gardens create a common space for people from diverse cultures, nationalities, and gender identities to come together and create strong community. Gardeners learn about new plants from each other, share seeds and plants, and expand their knowledge of each other's cultures and cuisines.{{Cite journal |last1=Mejia |first1=Angie |last2=Bhattacharya |first2=Manami |last3=Miraglia |first3=Joshua |last4=The Village Community Garden & Learning Center |date=2020-10-07 |title=Community Gardening as a Way to Build Cross-Cultural Community Resilience in Intersectionally Diverse Gardeners: Community-Based Participatory Research and Campus-Community-Partnered Proposal |journal=JMIR Research Protocols |language=en |volume=9 |issue=10 |pages=e21218 |doi=10.2196/21218 |doi-access=free |issn=1929-0748 |pmc=7578813 |pmid=33026358}} This knowledge and cultural exchange increases community connectedness and the cultural specificity of foods grown.
= Economic =
As the majority of the United States' farmers reach retirement age,{{Cite web|date=May 2014|title=2012 Census Highlights, Farm Demographics|url=https://www.agcensus.usda.gov/Publications/2012/Online_Resources/Highlights/Farm_Demographics/|access-date=15 Apr 2018|website=USDA Census of Agriculture}} community gardens play an active role in informing, and perhaps inspiring, a new generation to become involved with and passionate about growing food.{{Cite book|last=Biel|first=Robert|title=Sustainable Food Systems|publisher=UCL Press|pages=90–107|chapter=Built systems, biomimicry and urban food-growing}} Diversifying the food system with community gardens and other methods of urban agriculture will benefit the economy and create competition between product quality and value.{{Cite journal|last=Cohen|first=B. R.|date=Spring 2014|title=Don't Mono-crop the Movement Toward a Cultural Ecology of Local Food|journal=Gastronomica|volume=14|issue=1|pages=5–8|doi=10.1525/gfc.2014.14.1.5}}
Green spaces in cities often increase the land value of an area and contribute to gentrification.{{Cite web|date=2021-03-30|title=The Perils and Promises of Urban Greening|url=https://environment-review.yale.edu/perils-and-promises-urban-greening|access-date=2021-10-18|website=Yale Environment Review|language=en}} Gentrification, in turn, can lead to increased density and pressure on the land owner of the garden to develop it.
Being a member of a community garden requires time, energy, and some money for dues, seeds, plants, and fertilizers. Some community members may work multiple jobs or have family responsibilities, and have little to no extra time to commit. However, many gardens have sliding scales for dues, or have funding that subsidizes low-income gardeners.
= Environmental =
Food composting positively impacts the environment. A case study conducted in 2019 by the University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign and the University of Illinois at Chicago determined the impact from decentralized food composting in the City of Chicago. In 2015, the City of Chicago implemented an ordinance allowing acceptance and processing of food scraps at community gardens and urban farms. Approximately 16% of the food waste was processed at 86 registered compost facilities in 2019. The study estimates capacity for food composting could reach 27% of the city's residential food waste, resulting in an estimated savings of over $4 million per year. In addition to the financial cost savings, other benefits include reduced greenhouse gases because of reduced refuse pickup, compost as energy filled fertilizer for community gardens and urban farms, and waste reduction into landfills.{{Cite journal|doi=10.1016/j.scs.2019.101683|title=Decentralized community composting feasibility analysis for residential food waste: A Chicago case study|year=2019|last1=Pai|first1=Shantanu|last2=Ai|first2=Ning|last3=Zheng|first3=Junjun|journal=Sustainable Cities and Society|volume=50|page=101683|bibcode=2019SusCS..5001683P |s2cid=198485570}} However, food composting is not suitable for all community gardens because it requires a certain amount of inputs, a designated composting area, and regular maintenance, in return for a relatively small yield.
Community gardens have the potential to positively impact the areas around them. If gardeners employ organic and environmentally conscious techniques, community gardens can be a step away from chemically dependent and wasteful food systems. Gardens that produce crops and vegetables act to reduce the need for fossil-fuel intensive storage and delivery of food to local community members.{{cite journal | jstor=26241301 | title=Critical Urban Gardening | last1=Certomà | first1=Chiara | journal=RCC Perspectives | year=2015 | issue=1 | pages=13–18 }} As researcher Montenegro de Wit states, sustainable agriculture should not be "contained to the countryside."{{Cite journal|last=Montenegro de Wit|first=Maywa|date=2014|title=A Lighthouse for Urban Agriculture University, Community, and Redefining Expertise in the Food System|journal=Gastronomica|volume=14|issue=1|pages=9–22|doi=10.1525/gfc.2014.14.1.9|jstor=10.1525/gfc.2014.14.1.9}} By bringing these techniques into communities, learning opportunities arise as well as the chance of converting land from an "emissions-source" to a "carbon sink", as Robert Biel writes.
Community gardens provide miniature ecological reserves with flowers and food for many kinds of birds, insects and animals. Larger gardens with adequate space may host beehives.
= Health =
Community gardens benefit community food access by enhancing nutrition and physical activity.{{Cite book|title=Food and Society: Principles and Paradoxes|last=Guptill|first=Amy E.|publisher=Polity Press|year=2012|pages=13}} The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services recommends eating more dark green vegetables, orange vegetables, legumes, and fruits; eating less refined grains, fat, and calories; and obtaining 60 minutes of physical activity on most days.US Dept of Health and Human Services 6th ed. 2005 Recent public health evaluations show community gardens as a promising approach to promote healthy behaviors.{{cite journal | pmid = 18314085 | doi=10.1016/j.jneb.2006.12.003 | volume=40 | title=Fruit and vegetable intake among urban community gardeners | year=2008 | journal=J Nutr Educ Behav | pages=94–101 | last1 = Alaimo | first1 = K | last2 = Packnett | first2 = E | last3 = Miles | first3 = RA | last4 = Kruger | first4 = DJ| issue=2 }} This is particularly important in establishing healthy behaviors among children, given the rise of childhood obesity. A pilot study in Los Angeles showed a gardening and nutrition intervention improved dietary intake in children and reduced body mass index.{{cite journal | pmid = 21802571 | doi=10.1016/j.jada.2011.05.009 | volume=111 | title=LA Sprouts: a gardening, nutrition, and cooking intervention for Latino youth improves diet and reduces obesity | date=August 2011 | journal=J Am Diet Assoc | pages=1224–30 | last1 = Davis | first1 = JN | last2 = Ventura | first2 = EE | last3 = Cook | first3 = LT | last4 = Gyllenhammer | first4 = LE | last5 = Gatto | first5 = NM| issue=8 }}
Community gardens benefit community food security by providing residents with a culturally acceptable, nutritionally adequate diet through a sustainable food system.{{Cite book|title=Cultivating food justice: Race, class, and sustainability.|last=Alkon|first=A. H|publisher=MIT Press}} Community garden initiatives have inspired cities to enact policies for water use, improved access to produce, strengthened community building skills, and created culturally appropriate education programs that help elevate the community's collective consciousness about public health.{{Cite book|title=Food and Society|last=Guptill|first=Amy|publisher=Polity}} In impoverished urban areas especially, produce harvested from community gardens provides a nutritious alternative to what Nancy Janovicek calls "the industrial diet," which consists of cheap and accessible options like fast food.{{cite journal | jstor=26241387 | title=Seeds of Knowledge | last1=Janovicek | first1=Nancy | journal=RCC Perspectives | year=2016 | issue=4 | pages=33–40 }}
Professor Jill Litt and colleagues at the University of Colorado School of Public Health evaluated the effects on community gardening in the Denver metro area by studying the social environment, community building, and fruit and vegetable intake. Community gardeners were more likely than home gardeners and non-gardeners to meet the national recommendations of fruit and vegetable intake. Semi structured interviews carried out by Teig et al. revealed that Denver community gardeners felt a high level of trust between members of the garden and a strong sense of community.{{cite journal | pmid = 19577947 | doi=10.1016/j.healthplace.2009.06.003 | volume=15 | title=Collective efficacy in Denver, Colorado: Strengthening neighborhoods and health through community gardens | date=December 2009 | journal=Health Place | pages=1115–22 | last1 = Teig | first1 = E | last2 = Amulya | first2 = J | last3 = Bardwell | first3 = L | last4 = Buchenau | first4 = M | last5 = Marshall | first5 = JA | last6 = Litt | first6 = JS| issue=4 }} Furthermore, gardeners were involved in community voluntary efforts and donated surplus produce to populations without access to fresh produce.
= Social =
Agricultural activity in communities is a way of promoting self-sufficiency, as well as community empowerment and involvement. Additionally, producing food, helping the environment, and creating green spaces in cities contributes to an overall increase in happiness. Space in cities and communities reserved for growing vegetables and flowers promotes wellbeing, neighborliness, and the protection of nature.
Resources
The American Community Gardening Association is a non-profit organization promoting community gardens in the United States and Canada through various support programs including advocacy, training, conferences and events, and resources. Master gardener programs in all 50 U.S. states and 8 Canadian provinces are volunteer programs that train individuals in the science and art of gardening, and have resources to help people set up and manage a new garden. The University of Illinois Extension provides resources for Cook County, Illinois, as well as a video series, titled Community Gardens - 10 Steps to Successful Community Gardens, to assist organizations or groups who are researching the process of starting their own community garden.{{Citation|title=Community Gardens - 10 Steps to Successful Community Gardens (Module 1 Part 1)| date=April 3, 2018 |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TWSlrRo2Ddw|language=en|access-date=2021-03-15}}{{Cite web|last=Johnson|first=Ken|title=Starting a community garden|url=https://www.illinoistimes.com/springfield/starting-a-community-garden/Content?oid=11437566|access-date=2021-03-16|website=Illinois Times|language=en}} The University of Missouri Extension created a [https://extension.missouri.edu/mp906 Community Gardening Tool Kit] that includes a step by step guide, forms, and a list of resources. In addition, the National Agricultural Library of the United States Department of Agriculture provides numerous resources on their website for community gardens including financial resources. Author and community garden advocate, Ms. LaManda Joy, wrote several books, including Start a Community Food Garden, The Essential Handbook which offers all the information needed to start a community garden (available in print and audio books).{{Cite book |last=Joy |first=LaManda |title=Start a community food garden: the essential handbook |date=2014 |isbn=978-1-60469-668-4 |edition=1st |location=Portland, Oregon |oclc=899209216}} Grants provide additional financial resources for starting and maintaining community gardens.{{Cite web |title=Public Garden Funding Resources |website=American Public Gardens Association |url=https://www.publicgardens.org/public-garden-funding-resources |access-date=2021-03-15}}{{Cite web |date=May 1, 2020 |title=The GardenWorks Project announces grants for Community Garden Program |url=https://www.gardenworksproject.org/community_garden_program_2020 |access-date=2021-03-15 |website=GardenWorks Project |language=en}} State and local governments may offer financial assistance to community gardens.{{Cite web |title=Bill Status for HB3418 |url=https://www.ilga.gov/legislation/BillStatus.asp?DocNum=3418&GAID=14&DocTypeID=HB&SessionID=91&GA=100 |access-date=2021-03-15 |website=Illinois General Assembly}}{{Cite web |title=Community Garden Initiative |website=City of Mesa |url=https://www.mesaaz.gov/residents/sustainability/community-garden?locale=en |access-date=2021-03-15}}{{Cite web |title=How to Sign Up |url=http://www.seattle.gov/neighborhoods/programs-and-services/p-patch-community-gardening/how-to-sign-up|access-date=2021-03-15|website=Seattle Department of Neighborhoods}}
Examples
File:2008 community garden FtMason SanFrancisco 2703496202.jpgThe American Community Garden Association maintains lists of community gardens in the United States.{{cite web|url=https://communitygarden.org/find-a-garden/|title=Gardens, - American Community Garden Association|website=American Community Garden Association|access-date=2018-04-15|archive-date=2018-04-16|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180416164145/https://communitygarden.org/find-a-garden/|url-status=dead}} Community gardens can vary in shape, size, and function. Some of the largest community gardens in the nation are reported to be Shiloh Field Community Garden in Denton, Texas, measuring at 14.5 acres of land, and DeKalb County Community Gardens in DeKalb, Illinois, measuring over 15 acres of land.{{cite news|last1=Wylie|first1=Melissa|date=April 4, 2014|title=Largest community garden in U.S. feeds the hungry in Denton|work=The Dallas Morning News|publisher=James M. Moroney III|location=508 Young Street Dallas, Texas 75202 United States|url=http://www.dallasnews.com/news/metro/20140404-largest-community-garden-in-u.s.-feeds-needy-in-denton.ece|access-date=2 August 2015}}
File:2008 community garden FtMason SanFrancisco 2703482276.jpg
= California =
;Los Angeles
As of the year 2020, there are over 125 community gardens in Los Angeles County.{{cite web |title=Los Angeles Community Garden Council |url=http://lagardencouncil.org/ |website=Los Angeles Community Garden Council |access-date=13 January 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200113012416/http://lagardencouncil.org/ |archive-date=13 January 2020}} The Los Angeles Community Garden Council maintains resources and a [http://lagardencouncil.org/find-a-garden/ website] for people to locate gardens. These gardens consist of traditional community gardens where people rent a plot to grow their own fresh produce; educational gardens for teaching gardening, landscaping, nutrition and cooking; and urban farms where volunteers grow vegetables for local markets and people in need.
;San Francisco Bay Area
{{further|Urban agriculture in West Oakland}}
In San Francisco, community gardens are available through various public and private entities. Most community gardens in San Francisco are available through its Recreation and Park Department, which manages over 35 community gardens on city property. These are allotment gardens whereby individuals or groups volunteer to be assigned garden plots. Garden members within their respective gardens democratically organize themselves to set bylaws that are consistent with city policy. These gardeners often self-impose garden dues as a membership requirement to cover common expenses. To standardize the development and management of its community gardens, the Recreation and Park Commission adopted its Community Garden Policy in 2006.{{Citation needed|date=June 2009}}
Though not plot-based, the city's Department of Public Works supports communal-style gardening on city property whereby community groups participate in the development and maintenance of public gardens. No one person is responsible for any portion of the site. One group, the Quesada Gardens Initiative, a community-based and resident-led volunteer group in an underserved neighborhood called Bayview Hunters Point, has created an enclosed food-producing garden on city-owned land, as well as developed many residential urban farms around privately owned homes.
All of the community gardens of San Francisco are listed on the San Francisco Garden Resource Organization{{Cite news|url=https://sfenvironment.org/community-gardens|title=Community Gardens|date=2012-06-27|work=sfenvironment.org – Our Home. Our City. Our Planet|access-date=2017-10-02|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171002220449/https://sfenvironment.org/community-gardens|archive-date=2017-10-02|url-status=dead}} web site with detailed directions and garden pictures of some of the gardens.{{Cite web|url=http://sfrecpark.org/park-improvements/urban-agriculture-program-citywide/community-gardens-program/|title=Community Gardens Program {{!}} San Francisco Recreation and Park|website=sfrecpark.org|language=en-US|access-date=2017-10-02}}
On the East side of the Bay, urban agriculture has become prominent in addressing food insecurity and accessibility to agricultural education.{{Cite journal |last1=Ma |first1=Ben |last2=Zhou |first2=Tiantian |last3=Lei |first3=Shuo |last4=Wen |first4=Yali |last5=Htun |first5=Theint Theint |date=2019 |title=Effects of urban green spaces on residents' well-being |url=https://ideas.repec.org//a/spr/endesu/v21y2019i6d10.1007_s10668-018-0161-8.html |journal=Environment, Development and Sustainability: A Multidisciplinary Approach to the Theory and Practice of Sustainable Development |language=en |volume=21 |issue=6 |pages=2793–2809|doi=10.1007/s10668-018-0161-8 |bibcode=2019EDSus..21.2793M }}{{Cite journal |last1=Salleh |first1=Anizah Mohd |last2=Harun |first2=Nor Zalina |last3=Halim |first3=Sharina Abdul |date=2020-04-10 |title=Urban Food Insecurity: The relationship between community resilience and urban agriculture |url=https://ajqol.e-iph.co.uk/index.php/ajqol/article/view/206 |journal=Asian Journal of Quality of Life |language=en |volume=5 |issue=18 |pages=57–73 |doi=10.21834/ajqol.v5i18.206 |issn=2398-4279|doi-access=free }} School programs, community farms, and more make up over 120 urban farms across East Bay cities.{{Cite journal |last=Sowerwine |first=Jennifer |date=17 Nov 2019 |title=Producing urban agroecology in the East Bay: from soil health to community empowerment |url=https://food.berkeley.edu/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/Producing-urban-agroecology-in-the-East-Bay-from-soil-health-to-community-empowerment.pdf |journal=Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems |volume=44 |issue=5|page=566 |doi=10.1080/21683565.2019.1690615 |bibcode=2020AgSFS..44..566S }} The City of Oakland has progressively invested in community gardens by revising zoning and land use policies to allow easier establishment of community farms.{{Cite web |title=Urban Agriculture and Community Gardens |url=https://www.oaklandca.gov/topics/urban-agriculture-citywide-update |access-date=2024-05-11 |website=City of Oakland |language=en}} In addition to support from the City, universities also partner with community organizations (e.g. University of California, Berkeley, Gill Tract Community Farm).
= Colorado =
;Denver
There are over 100 community gardens in the Denver metro area. Gardens are located on vacant land (42%), school grounds (26%), housing facilities (15%), and other locations (17%) such as churches and senior centers. Based on land tenure, community gardens in Denver are found on public land (52%), private land (24%), or owned by non-profits (16%) and Denver Urban Gardens (8%).{{Cite web |url=http://webmedia.unmc.edu/community/citymatch/EMCH/101807/Gardens%20and%20Health_092607.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2011-12-05 |archive-date=2012-04-26 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120426022400/http://webmedia.unmc.edu/Community/CityMatch/EMCH/101807/Gardens%20and%20Health_092607.pdf |url-status=dead }} Denver Urban Gardens (DUG) is a non-profit organization that assists community members with the design, planning, and construction of neighborhood community gardens.{{cite news |last1=Thorburn |first1=Grace |title=For 40 years, DUG has helped communities grow and share food |url=https://www.denvervoice.org/archive/2024/3/22/for-40-years-dug-has-helped-communities-grow-and-share-food |work=The Denver Voice |date=22 March 2024}}{{cite web|url=http://www.denverpost.com/frontpage/ci_9544778|title=Food gardens a growing trend|date=10 June 2008}} The majority of DUG's community gardens are located in low-to-moderate income areas,{{cite news |last1=Johnson |first1=Betsy |title=Community Garden Management Toolkit |url=https://foodinneighborhoods.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/CGMgtmtToolkit.pdf |work=Food In Neighborhoods.org |date=March 2014 |page=3}} and more than 20 are located at Denver public schools.{{cite web|url=http://dug.org/education/|title=Education Internship - Denver Urban Gardens|work=Denver Urban Gardens |date=7 February 2011}} DUG also partners with government and other non-profit agencies to offer gardening and nutrition education.{{cite web|last=Arias|first=Richard|title=Case Studies of Community Gardens: Denver Urban Gardens|url=http://www.davidjhess.org/DenverDUG.pdf|work=www.davidjhes.org|access-date=22 July 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091013001116/http://www.davidjhess.org/DenverDUG.pdf|archive-date=2009-10-13|url-status=dead}}
In 2010, the Westwood community partnered with the non-profit Re:Vision to create a system of community gardens to increase healthy food access. As of 2015, they planned to expand the initiative and open a food cooperative in the neighborhood.{{cite web|url=http://www.revisioninternational.org/westwood-food-coop/|title=Westwood Food Co-op|website=Re:Vision}}
;Aurora
The Aurora Mental Health Center, located in Aurora, Colorado, started a community garden in the eastern Aurora area in 2014 to improve community relations. The Aurora Mental Health Center Community Garden allows for community members to become garden leaders, helping newer members grow their plants, and provides individual horticulture therapy practices.{{Cite web|title=Aurora Mental Health Center Community Garden|url=https://dug.org/garden/aurora-mental-health-center/|access-date=2021-03-16|website=Denver Urban Gardens|language=en-US}}
= Illinois =
Northern IllinoisFile:Rogers Park Chicago IL Community Garden.jpg
Over 900 community gardens exist in Northern Illinois, which includes the northernmost twenty-four counties including Cook, DuPage, DeKalb, and Rock Island counties. Cook County includes the City of Chicago where the Chicago Urban Agriculture Mapping Project (CUAMP), through city ordinance, documents community gardens and gardens that are actively food composting. Since the inception of the CUAMP in 2010, over 800 local gardens were recorded, with 109 of the gardens participating in food composting.{{Cite web|title=Chicago Urban Agriculture Mapping Project|url=https://cuamp.org/#/|access-date=2021-03-16|website=cuamp.org}}{{Cite web|last=says|first=Ron Duncan|date=2012-05-11|title=Chicago Community Gardens Grow Veggies and Spirit|url=https://www.ilfbpartners.com/family/chicago-neighborhood-gardens-grow-veggies-community-spirit/|access-date=2021-03-16|website=Illinois Farm Bureau Partners|language=en-US}} As part of the Cool Counties Initiatives to reduce greenhouse gases by 20% by 2030, DuPage County is promoting community gardens through collaboration with several organizations including The GardenWorks Project, a non-profit organization focused on reducing food insecurity by promoting community gardens and home gardens through education and empowerment.{{Cite web|title=DuPage County IL – Waste, Recycling and Energy - Community Gardens|url=https://www.dupageco.org/CommunityGardens/|access-date=2021-03-16|website=www.dupageco.org}} Located in DeKalb County, the DeKalb County Community Gardens was started by Dan Kenney in 2012 to overcome food insecurity, and offers access to over 15 acres of garden growing area.{{Cite web|title=Home|url=https://www.dekalbgardens.org/|access-date=2021-03-16|website=DeKalb County Community Gardens|language=en-US}} The Community Garden Program offered through the City of Rock Island Economic Community Development leases city owned land within twenty-five sites for $50-$70 per year for community gardens. Over ten tons of food exceeding $64,000 was produced in 2018 through this program.{{Cite web|title=Community Garden Program {{!}} Rock Island, IL - Official Website|url=https://www.rigov.org/1326/Community-Garden-Program|access-date=2021-03-16|website=www.rigov.org}} Local libraries are contributing to community gardens in Illinois as well.{{Cite web|title=Can You Dig It? Library Gardens Are Growing in Illinois - Illinois Library Association|url=https://www.ila.org/publications/ila-reporter/article/18/can-you-dig-it-library-gardens-are-growing-in-illinois|access-date=2021-03-16|website=www.ila.org}}
Central Illinois
Although most counties in Central Illinois have an agriculture-based economy with common crops of corn and soybeans, this has not prevented community gardens from developing. When Marty Travis and his family purchased Livingston County’s oldest farm, Spence Farm, in 2005, they founded the non-profit Spence Farm Foundation to promote education and overcome food insecurity. Over 700 pounds of produce were donated to local churches and pantries in 2015.{{Cite web|last=Writer|first=KEVIN BARLOW Lee News Service|title=Spence Farm: Generations of farming|url=https://herald-review.com/business/agriculture/spence-farm-generations-of-farming/article_f5de1e08-9040-5cf4-9cd5-8cdaa37e84e4.html|access-date=2021-03-16|website=Herald-Review.com|date=25 September 2016 |language=en}}{{Cite web|last=EPIC|title=Marty Travis|url=https://www.food4ever.org/person/%person-category%/marty-travis/|access-date=2021-03-16|website=Food Forever|language=en-US}} The University of Illinois Extension supports community gardens with education programs facilitated by master gardener volunteers at various locations, including Carl Sandburg College Community Garden in Galesburg.{{Cite web|title=University of Illinois Extension serving Henderson, Knox, McDonough and Warren Counties|url=https://web.extension.illinois.edu/units/event.cfm?UnitID=474&EventID=81595|access-date=2021-03-16|website=web.extension.illinois.edu}} Springfield is the state capital of Illinois and home to the University of Illinois Springfield. Since it began as a student group project in 2016, the UIS Community Garden and its volunteers have contributed over 600 pounds of produce to the local community.{{Cite web|title=About the Community Garden - Community Garden - UIS|url=https://www.uis.edu/communitygarden/about/|access-date=2021-03-16|website=www.uis.edu|language=en}} In Champaign County, community gardens are gaining popularity with community groups promoting community garden opportunities and education.{{Cite web|date=2021-03-03|title=How to Get a Garden Plot in Champaign-Urbana|url=https://www.chambanamoms.com/2021/03/02/how-to-get-a-garden-plot-in-champaign-urbana/|access-date=2021-03-16|website=ChambanaMoms.com|language=en-US}} Other communities are following suit by encouraging community gardens in their area, including Harvard, Bloomington, and Morton.{{Cite web|title=Morton, Illinois Giving Garden/Community Garden|url=https://www.scout.org/node/8627|access-date=2021-03-16|website=www.scout.org|language=en}}{{Cite web|title=Community Garden Plots {{!}} Bloomington, IL Parks & Recreation|url=https://www.bloomingtonparks.org/rentals/community-garden-plots|access-date=2021-03-16|website=www.bloomingtonparks.org}}
Southern Illinois
Southern Illinois has the longest growing season in the state, with as much as two weeks of growing before and after Central Illinois. Similar to other regions of Illinois, the University of Illinois Extension offers education and other resources like the planting grid for community gardens and gardeners in Southern Illinois.{{Cite web|title=Do you know when to plant in Illinois?: University of Illinois Extension|url=https://extension.illinois.edu/blogs/flowers-fruits-and-frass/2021-02-02-do-you-know-when-plant-illinois|access-date=2021-03-16|website=extension.illinois.edu|date=2 February 2021 |language=en}} Carbondale has a number of community gardens, including the Red Hen Community Garden that hosted the Women of Change Big Event on September 19, 2020.{{Cite web|last=SOUTHERN|first=MARILYN HALSTEAD THE|title=Community gardens offer a variety of opportunities for those interested in gardening|url=https://thesouthern.com/news/local/community-gardens-offer-a-variety-of-opportunities-for-those-interested-in-gardening/article_27e3b2c4-5c01-5728-a569-52b6af30742b.html|access-date=2021-03-16|website=The Southern|date=9 March 2016 |language=en}}{{Cite web|title=Looking for a place to garden? Try one of these community gardens|url=https://thesouthern.com/news/local/looking-for-a-place-to-garden-try-one-of-these-community-gardens/article_d5e34a03-ad2d-55a9-bc80-7bfa3dbf4504.html|access-date=2021-03-16|website=The Southern|date=9 March 2016 |language=en}}{{Cite web|last=Sutton|first=Leah|title=Carbondale Women for Change host annual Big Event|url=https://dailyegyptian.com/102666/news/city/carbondale-women-for-change-host-annual-big-event/|access-date=2021-03-16|website=Daily Egyptian}} Seeds and fresh produce were handed out to attendees of the event. In May 2020, the Men of Power-Women of Strength group in Cairo created a community garden at Cairo High School where students will have the opportunity to learn agriculture and gardening skills.{{Cite web|last=Mohundro|first=Mike|title=Southern Ill. group comes together to grow community garden project in Cairo|url=https://www.kfvs12.com/2020/05/30/southern-il-group-comes-together-grow-community-garden-project-cairo/|access-date=2021-03-16|website=www.kfvs12.com|date=31 May 2020 |language=en-US}}
= Indiana =
Jasper County
Community garden guides and education resources for Jasper County and Indiana are available through the Purdue University Extension.{{Cite web|last=Mayer|first=Steve|title=Urban/Community Gardening|url=https://extension.purdue.edu/article/4492|access-date=2021-03-16|website=extension.purdue.edu|language=en}}{{Cite web|author=Staff report|title=Rensselaer Community Garden plots still available|url=https://www.newsbug.info/rensselaer_republican/news/local/rensselaer-community-garden-plots-still-available/article_3a79220b-6739-5995-81d6-2b2b3a68be4c.html|access-date=2021-03-16|website=Newsbug.info|date=27 March 2018 |language=en}}
Marion County
IndyGrown in partnership with the Purdue University Extension created an interactive map featuring community gardens in the Indianapolis area.{{Cite web|title=Map|url=http://www.indygrown.com/map/|access-date=2021-03-16|website=IndyGrown|language=en-US}}
Vigo County
Over 3500 pounds of produce were donated in 2020 by the ISU Community Garden in Terra Haute, Indiana. Since inception in 2008, the community garden has grown to over 160 plots available to the community.{{Cite web|last=report|first=Tribune-Star staff|title=Plots still available at ISU Community Garden|url=https://www.tribstar.com/news/local_news/plots-still-available-at-isu-community-garden/article_a7147982-919f-5fc9-a656-7d2b7a3914ff.html|access-date=2021-03-16|website=Terre Haute Tribune-Star|date=27 March 2020 |language=en}}{{Cite web|date=2020-07-29|title=Community Garden|url=https://www.indstate.edu/university-engagement/sustainability/community-garden|access-date=2021-03-16|website=Indiana State University|language=en}}
= Kentucky =
;Covington
Redden Gardens is a non-profit organization intended for vegetable gardening and community knowledge sharing while also promoting sustainable practices. In addition to their main garden in the Eastside neighborhood, they have participated in the creation of a community garden in the MainStrasse Neighborhood and a heritage garden in Devou Park.{{Cite web|url=http://www.reddengardens.org/|title=About us|website=www.reddengardens.org|access-date=2019-07-01}}
= Louisiana =
{{Main|Community gardens in New Orleans}}
= Massachusetts =
;Boston
In the city of Boston, Massachusetts, there are a variety of local and non-profit organizations that own, promote, and manage approximately 180 community gardens throughout the city, with the largest non-profit organization being [https://thetrustees.org/place/boston-community-gardens/ The Trustees] with 56 community gardens totaling 15 acres under their management.{{Cite web|title=Boston Community Gardens|url=https://thetrustees.org/place/boston-community-gardens/|access-date=2021-03-16|website=The Trustees of Reservations|language=en}} In 2002, the volunteer-run Boston Community Garden Council was formed as a means of facilitating communication and cooperation between these organizations along with individual gardeners in Boston.{{cite web|last=Dowty|first=Rachel|title=Case Studies of Community Gardens: Boston Community Gardens|url=http://www.davidjhess.org/BostonCG.pdf|work=www.davidjhess.org|access-date=22 July 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091013000406/http://www.davidjhess.org/BostonCG.pdf|archive-date=2009-10-13|url-status=dead}}
Arlington
Robbins Farm Garden is a cooperative community garden in Robbins Farm Park in Arlington, Massachusetts, roughly 2500 sf in size. The park is owned by the Town of Arlington and managed by Arlington's Park and Recreation Committee. The garden is managed cooperatively - that is, all member gardeners work in the entire space, rather than as individual allotments, and share the entire harvest. Decisions are generally made by consensus. Each gardener pays a small fee to the Town, which provides the space and water, and a small fee to the cooperative to pay for seeds, fertilizer, etc. Each gardener is expected to contribute a fair share of the gardening labor. An important function of the garden is to share gardening know-how between experienced and novice gardeners, which may help them manage their own home gardens. The garden web site also provides hyper-local guidance to local gardeners regarding scheduling, vegetable varieties, etc.
The Town of Arlington Recreation Department also operates a traditional community allotment garden in Magnolia Park, in which each gardener manages their own small plot.
= Michigan =
Detroit
The decline of Detroit's population since the 1950s has led to an increase in vacant land which has, in the 21st century, been utilized for urban agriculture as part of the planned revitalization of the city.{{Cite news|url=https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2010/jul/11/detroit-urban-renewal-city-farms-paul-harris|title=Detroit gets growing|last=Harris|first=Paul|date=2010-07-10|work=The Observer|access-date=2020-01-29|language=en-GB|issn=0029-7712}} Currently, Detroit is home to roughly 1,400 community gardens,{{Cite web|url=https://www.yesmagazine.org/social-justice/2019/11/05/food-community-detroit-garden-agriculture|title=In Detroit, A New Type of Agricultural Neighborhood Has Emerged|website=Yes! Magazine|language=en-US|access-date=2020-01-29}} including the Earthworks Farm,{{cite web|url=http://www.cskdetroit.org/EWG/index.cfm|title=Capuchin Soup Kitchen - Earthworks Urban Farm|website=www.cskdetroit.org}} the North Cass Community Garden,{{cite web|url=https://www.flickr.com/photos/64429486@N00/5087725908/|title=Midtown, Detroit, Michigan|date=16 October 2010}} and the Woodbridge Community Garden.{{cite web|url=https://www.flickr.com/photos/vanessamiller/4674707561/|title=woodbridge community garden|date=6 June 2010}} Michigan Urban Farming Initiative, a nonprofit, has also introduced an agrihood which focuses on food insecurity for the surrounding community. Organizations like this have begun to transform Detroit from a destitute food desert to a thriving, food secure community {{Cite web |title=Black farmers in Detroit are growing their own food. But they're having trouble owning the land. |url=https://theworld.org/stories/2016/03/29/detroit-african-american-farmers-are-growing-their-own-food-heres-why-they-are |access-date=2024-05-11 |website=The World from PRX |date=March 29, 2016 |language=en}}.
= Missouri =
File:Bell Demonstration and Community Garden, St. Louis, MO Spring of 2016.jpg
St. Louis is home to Gateway Greening,{{cite web|url=http://www.gatewaygreening.org/|title=Home - Gateway Greening|website=Gateway Greening}} a unique non-profit organization that works with interested neighborhoods to transform vacant lots into vibrant community gardens. Since 1984, Gateway Greening has grown to support more than 250 community, school and youth gardens throughout St. Louis City and County. This support is provided through the creation of a grant processes which award much needed materials, tools, and other valuable resources to new and existing community gardens.{{Citation|last=gatewaygreening|title=Gateway Greening: Building a Community Garden|date=2013-06-03|url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=23OHtDrPGAs|access-date=2016-05-02}} Additionally, Gateway Greening provides a rich schedule of ongoing community education opportunities at the Bell Community and Demonstration Garden,{{Cite web |url=http://www.gatewaygreening.org/grow/gardens/bell-demonstration-and-community-garden/ |title=Bell Demonstration and Community Garden - Gateway Greening |access-date=2016-05-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160325205728/http://www.gatewaygreening.org/grow/gardens/bell-demonstration-and-community-garden/ |archive-date=2016-03-25 |url-status=dead }}{{Cite web|url=https://www.facebook.com/pages/Bell-Community-and-Demonstration-Garden/166775530051632|title=Bell Community and Demonstration Garden – St. Louis – Local Business {{!}} Facebook|website=www.facebook.com|access-date=2016-05-02}} a network of Community Resource Gardens,{{Cite web |url=http://www.gatewaygreening.org/grow/gardens/community-resource-garden-directory/ |title=Community Resource Gardens - Gateway Greening |access-date=2016-05-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160321220702/http://www.gatewaygreening.org/grow/gardens/community-resource-garden-directory/ |archive-date=2016-03-21 |url-status=dead }} and the Gateway Greening Urban Farm,{{Cite web |url=http://www.gatewaygreening.org/grow/gardens/urban-farm/ |title=Gateway Greening's Urban Farm - Gateway Greening |access-date=2016-05-02 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160517142323/http://www.gatewaygreening.org/grow/gardens/urban-farm/ |archive-date=2016-05-17 |url-status=dead }} a 2.5 acre urban farm located in downtown St. Louis.
Although Gateway Greening is a major proponent of community gardening in St. Louis, it is by no means the only group to create or support STL Urban Agriculture. Community gardening and urban agriculture has taken off in St. Louis, Missouri in the 2010s, in part thanks to the Garden Lease Program,{{cite web|url=https://www.stlouis-mo.gov/government/departments/sldc/real-estate/garden-lease.cfm|title=Garden Lease Program|website=stlouis-mo.gov}} which allows residents to lease LRA land for a period of 5 years.
= Nebraska =
{{Main|Community gardens in Nebraska}}
= New Jersey =
Community gardens in New Jersey include the South Orange Community Garden.Theresa Burns. Garden State: Building Community and a Garden. New York Times, April 22, 2010.
= New York =
{{Main|Community Gardens in New York City}}
There are over 550 community gardens on city property which are supported by GreenThumb (the community gardening division of NYC Parks), over 745 school gardens, over 100 gardens in land trusts, and over 700 gardens at public housing developments throughout New York City. Begun in 1978, GreenThumb is the largest and oldest program of its kind in the United States.{{cite web|url=http://www.greenthumbnyc.org/|title=NYC Parks GreenThumb|website=www.greenthumbnyc.org|access-date=2011-02-27|archive-date=2020-08-10|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200810145506/https://www.greenthumbnyc.org/|url-status=dead}}
= Oregon =
File:Earl Boyles Community Garden.jpg
Portland
There has been an official community garden city program in Portland, Oregon since 1975. There are currently 57{{Citation|title=List of community gardens in Portland, Oregon|date=2017-07-09|url=https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_community_gardens_in_Portland,_Oregon&oldid=789732295|work=Wikipedia|language=en|access-date=2019-11-24}} active community gardens in the city. Organizations like The Portland Community Gardens Project and Food for Oregon have worked to provide residents with even more spaces to cultivate gardens. Since 2011, these organizations have aided the community in acquiring and cultivating garden plots. Other organizations such as Southeast Uplift{{Cite web|title=Mission/Values|url=https://www.seuplift.org/who-we-are/missionvalues/|access-date=2019-11-24|website=Southeast Uplift}} have integrated community gardens as a part of the initiative to encourage community inclusiveness. The Brooklyn Community Garden was created in 2012 with the aid of the Brooklyn Action Corps Neighborhood Association and Southeast Uplift. Portland is also home to rain gardens that work alongside the community gardens. These rain gardens are planted to clean storm water runoff, as well as providing a place for pollinators such as bees.{{Cite journal|last1=Wallace|first1=Hailey|last2=Dresner|first2=Dr|date=2019-02-11|title=Assessing the relationship between floral blossom density, type and floral visitation activity of bees in southeast Portland involving community scientists|url=https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/uerc/2019/posters/7|journal=Urban Ecosystem Research Consortium of Portland/Vancouver}}
= Utah =
;Salt Lake City
In Salt Lake City, community gardens are available through the non-profit organization Wasatch Community Gardens.{{cite web|url=http://wasatchgardens.org/index.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090916012251/http://wasatchgardens.org/index.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=16 September 2009|title=Wasatch Community Gardens|date=16 September 2009}} On May 16, 2009[http://www.slcgov.com/council/D5/pages/Peoples%20Portable%20Garden.htm Salt Lake City Government announces Portable People's Garden] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110316150902/http://www.slcgov.com/council/D5/pages/Peoples%20Portable%20Garden.htm |date=2011-03-16 }} Wasatch Community Gardens, in collaboration with The Redevelopment Agency of Salt Lake City (RAD),{{cite web |url=http://www.slcrda.com/ |title=Home |website=slcrda.com}} launched the first People's Portable Garden in Salt Lake City. The garden is designed to stimulate growth and revitalize different areas of the city. Salt Lake City put $48,000 into the People's Portable Garden.{{cite web|url=http://www.cityweekly.net/utah/article-8113-public-nuisance.html|title=Public Nuisance|first=Ted|last=McDonough}} The People's Portable Garden is located at 900 S 200 W, Salt Lake City.[http://www.wasatchgardens.org/peoplesportablegarden.html Wasatch Community Gardens "New People's Portable Gardens"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090917203430/http://wasatchgardens.org/peoplesportablegarden.html |date=2009-09-17 }}
= Washington =
;Seattle
The Seattle P-Patch program for community garden plots began in the early 70s during an economic downturn known locally as the "Boeing Bust" which had resulted in many people without work or money. Darlyn Rundberg Del Boca, a University of Washington student, saw an opportunity to promote children's gardening with a focus on growing for the local Neighbors in Need food bank program; with the help of a Seattle Councilmember, Del Boca obtained permission to use part of the Picardo family's truck garden in northeast Seattle with the City of Seattle renting the land for the cost of its real estate taxes. The first garden consisted of a large central garden plot planted by children from the nearby elementary school and their parents; families who volunteered to help were offered smaller individual plots around the perimeter of the central plot. The City subsequently purchased the Picardo farm, and the program of renting individual garden plots arising from the first efforts was named 'P-Patch' in honor of the Picardo family's contribution. The P-Patch program continued to grow and currently consists of 1900 plots in 68 locations with a total of {{convert|23|acre|m2}} of land, with additions planned each year, and the tradition of growing for local food banks resulted in 12.3 tons of food donated in 2008.{{cite web|last=Hess|first=David J.|title=Case Studies of Community Gardens: Seattle's P Patches|url=http://www.davidjhess.org/SeattleCG.pdf|work=www.davidjhess.org|access-date=22 July 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091013001300/http://www.davidjhess.org/SeattleCG.pdf|archive-date=2009-10-13|url-status=dead}}
;Olympia
In 2010 the city of Olympia adopted a plan to create up to six community gardens. Currently, the city has two gardens: one at Sunrise park and the Yauger Community Garden Project. There are also many private community gardens such Wendell Berry in the Bigelow neighborhood.{{cite web|url=http://caseyspulpit.blogspot.com/2011/12/news-from-grapvine-gardening-takes.html|title=Blogger: Aanmelden|access-date=2011-12-19|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120426061536/http://caseyspulpit.blogspot.com/2011/12/news-from-grapvine-gardening-takes.html|archive-date=2012-04-26|url-status=dead}}
Tacoma
Tacoma is home to more than 43 community gardens, including 11 on City-owned property. Gardens are managed by Metro Parks, churches, community groups, schools and universities, and many other organizations.{{Cite web|url=https://www.cityoftacoma.org/cms/one.aspx?pageId=17030|title=Community Gardens {{!}} City of Tacoma|website=City of Tacoma}}
Image Gallery
File:2005 Meredith community garden HoustonTX 256568308.jpg|Meredith Gardens, Houston TX, 2005
File:2007 Peralta community garden OaklandCA 449693026.jpg|Peralta estate, Fruitvale, Oakland, California, 2007
File:2008 Oliver community garden BaltimoreMD PhotoBy SusanReimer BaltimoreSun 3926429108.jpg|Oliver Garden, Baltimore, MD, 2008
File:2008 community garden JacksonvilleFL 2527237610.png|Springfield Community Garden, Jacksonville, Florida, 2008
File:2009 SouthBeach community garden Miami 3516803613.jpg|South Beach community garden, Miami, Florida, 2009
File:2009 community garden Omaha Nebraska 3916070163.jpg|Gifford Park community garden, Omaha, Nebraska, 2009
File:2009 Glenwood community garden Philadelphia 3496476276.jpg|Glenwood Green Acres 18th Street & Glenwood Avenue, North Central Philadelphia, 2009
File:2006 community garden DC 140626989.jpg|Fort Dupont Community Garden, Washington DC, 2010
File:2010 community garden PortlandOR 5336843188.jpg|Portland, Oregon, 2010
File:2010 community garden AtlantaGA 4898749834.jpg|Oakhurst Community Garden, Atlanta GA, 2010
File:2010 WiseWords community garden NewOrleans 4855100893.jpg|Wise Words Community Garden in Mid-City, New Orleans, 2010
File:2010 Austin community garden Texas 5237614873.jpg|Austin, Texas, 2010
File:BGSU Campus Community Garden.jpg|BGSU Community Garden, 2019
See also
{{portal|Gardening}}
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
{{div col|colwidth=30em}}
- Allotment gardens
- American Community Gardening Association
- Commons
- Communal garden
- Community Food Security Coalition
- Community Supported Agriculture
- Garden sharing
- Guerrilla gardening
- Heirloom plant
- Intercultural Garden
- Seed swap
- Seedbank
- Urban gardening
- Urban horticulture
{{div col end}}
{{div col end}}
References
{{reflist|2}}
Further reading
- {{citation |title=Meet the Tenacious Gardeners Putting Down Roots in 'America's Most Desperate Town' |date=June 9, 2014 |work=Yes |url=http://www.yesmagazine.org/planet/meet-the-tenacious-gardeners-putting-down-roots-in-america-s-most-desperate-town }} (about Camden, NJ)
- {{citation |url=https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2014/may/20/new-york-success-story-growing-the-garden-of-eden-in-brooklyn |title=New York success story: growing the Garden of Eden in Brooklyn |date= 20 May 2014 |work=Guardian Cities |publisher=Guardian.com }}
- Cindy Rosenthal. The "Common Green/Common Ground" Performance Project: The Personal, the Political, the Gardens, and NYU. TDR Vol. 46, No. 3 (Autumn, 2002), pp. 132–164
- [https://marinetteboat.com/images/GardenLeadershipv7.pdf Joseph Howard, various. Community Garden Leadership Course (Powerpoint). 2015 ]{{dead link|date=August 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}
- Joy, LaManda (2014). Start a Community Food Garden: The Essential Handbook (1st edition). Portland, Oregon. {{ISBN|978-1-60469-4|invalid1=yes}}.
- Laura Lawson, (2005). City Bountiful: A Century of Community Gardening in America. Berkeley: University of California Press. {{ISBN|0-520-24343-9}}.
- Sam Bass Warner. To Dwell Is to Garden: A History of Boston's Community Gardens. Boston: Northeastern University Press, 1987.
- {{cite journal | last1 = Smith | first1 = Christopher M. | last2 = Kurtz | first2 = Hilda E. | year = 2003 | title = Community Gardens and Politics of Scale in New York City | journal = Geographical Review | volume = 93 | issue = 2| pages = 193–212 | doi = 10.1111/j.1931-0846.2003.tb00029.x | bibcode = 2003GeoRv..93..193S | s2cid = 145237089 }}
External links
{{Commons category|Community gardens in the United States}}
- [http://www.sfgro.org/sfgardens.php List of San Francisco Community Gardens]. List maintained by the San Francisco Garden Resource Organization.
- [http://www.nyccgc.org/ New York City Community Garden Coalition]
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20101121104518/http://communitygarden.org/learn/resources/resourcelinks.php Resource links] compiled by the American Community Gardening Association
- [http://www.bbg.org/gardening/handbook/community_gardening/#/tabs-3 Resource links related to community gardening]. Published by Brooklyn Botanic Garden
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20110721210400/http://www.urbanharvest.org/cgardens/index.html Urban Harvest Community Gardens], Texas
- [http://www.worldcat.org/search?q=su%3ACommunity+gardens+united+states&fq=&dblist=638&qt=sort&se=yr&sd=desc&qt=sort_yr_desc WorldCat]. Works related to community gardens in the USA
- [https://robbinsfarmgarden.org/ Robbins Farm Garden] a cooperative community garden in Arlington, Massachusetts
{{DEFAULTSORT:Community Gardening United States}}
Category:Neighborhood associations