Tag: Boston Committee

  • Thursday, November 12, 10:00 am – From Landscape Gardening to Landscape Urbanism

    The Boston Committee of the Garden Club of America will hold its annual fall membership meeting, lecture and luncheon on Thursday, November 12 beginning at 10 am at The Country Club, 191 Clyde Street in Brookline.  Charles Waldheim will give a talk entitled From Landscape Gardening to Landscape Urbanism.

    Charles Waldheim is the John E. Irving Professor of Landscape Architecture at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design. His lecture will focus on the evolution and current trends in ‘Landscape Urbanism’, a term coined by Waldheim to describe the recent emergence of landscape as a medium of urban order for the contemporary city. Professor Waldheim is a Canadian-American architect, urban theorist, and educator. His research examines the relations between landscape, ecology, and contemporary urbanism. At the same time that urban sprawl has distanced the population from the landscape, environmental literacy among designers and scholars has grown, giving rise to an architectural discourse known as ‘landscape urbanism’. In his lecture Waldheim, who is at the forefront of this movement, explores the origins, the current context and the aspirations of this relatively new field that is inspiring the future of city making. Waldheim is author, editor, or co-editor of numerous books on the subject, and his writing has been published and translated internationally. He has taught at Rice University, University of Toronto, University of Pennsylvania, and the University of Michigan. Charles is also the Ruettgers Consulting Curator of Landscape at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

    The event is open to members of Garden Clubs affiliated with The Boston Committee and their guests.  Garden Club of the Back Bay members will receive separate invitations and a car pool notice in the mail.  For more information email info@bostoncommittee.org.

  • Wednesday, May 6, 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm – 25th Anniversary Celebration of The Boston Committee of the Garden Club of America

    Join The Boston Committee of the Garden Club of America for a celebration of 25 years of community service to the City of Boston and its neighborhoods on Wednesday, May 6, from 6:30 pm – 9:00 pm at the Governor Shirley-Eustis Estate, 33 Shirley Street in Boston.  There will be an auction to benefit the  “Windermere Garden” project of the Boston Natural Areas Network, a division of the Trustees of Reservations.  Free parking is available directly across the street.  Boston Committee club members will receive invitations.  For more information visit www.bostoncommittee.org.

  • Boston Committee of the Garden Club of America 2015 Blossom Fund Project

    As many know, The Garden Club of the Back Bay is an affiliate member of the Boston Committee of the Garden Club of America (read about the organization at www.bostoncommittee.org) and is invested in the latest project to be funded by The Blossom Fund in honor of the upcoming 25th anniversary of The Boston Committee.  The Fairmount Greenway and Windermere Road Project is an initiative sponsored by the Boston Natural Areas Network, now part of the Trustees of Reservations.

    Background: The 9.2-mile Fairmount Indigo Line is a MBTA commuter rail service running from Boston’s South Station to Readville in Hyde Park, passing through some of the city’s lowest income neighborhoods. For decades the rail line has offered only very limited service, with few stops and relatively high prices. The City of Boston and the MBTA are now working to improve transit options for the 100,000 residents who live within a half-mile the Fairmont Line. In particular, the MBTA is constructing four new stations and improving access to the railway, and the Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA) is investing in the half-mile corridor adjacent to the rail line. As part of this effort, many organizations are working to enhance access to parks and open space along the Fairmount corridor. The BRA’s plan calls for connecting existing parks and gardens through pedestrian and bicycle pathways and expanding community gardens. Meanwhile, community development corporations and neighborhood groups are working to create a Fairmont Greenway. The Greenway will convert City-owned vacant lots along the corridor into parks and gardens, and connect them via bicycle lanes and street improvements that make it safe and pleasant to walk between Fairmount station stops, parks, and neighborhood destinations. Ultimately, the Fairmount Greenway will complement the Emerald Necklace; the Boston HarborWalk; and the Rose Kennedy, East Boston, and Neponset River Greenways as signature linear parks in Boston, drawing visitors to new sections of the city and providing green space and pedestrian access for residents.
    Progress to Date: The MBTA has now opened three of the four planned stations along the Fairmount Indigo Line, and plans for the Fairmount Greenway are taking shape. Several pilot projects along the greenway have been identified, and the first of these to be completed is the Woolson Street community garden in Mattapan, built by the Boston Natural Areas Network (BNAN) in partnership with the BRA and community members. This garden provides a healing oasis in a neighborhood marked by violence, and its opening on September 6, 2014 was heralded by the Mayor as an outstanding example of teamwork and collaboration.

    Next Steps: BNAN is continuing to work in partnership with the Fairmount Indigo Corridor Collaborative to plan the Fairmount Greenway, and is partnering with the BRA to convert vacant lots along the corridor into community gardens. This year the BRA has offered BNAN four vacant City-owned lots for conversion to community gardens, along with partial funding for construction. BNAN is now raising the remaining funds needed and preparing to begin construction. The next garden to be completed as part of Fairmount Greenway project will be the garden at Windermere Road in the Uphams Corner neighborhood. This 4,095 square foot lot is located a 9 minute walk (0.5 miles) from the Uphams Corner station on the Fairmount line, a few blocks southeast of the Strand Theater. The property will provide approximately 12 new garden plots and will draw in visitors and neighbors for community gardening workshops and garden events. BNAN will provide water for irrigation, terraced beds, garden paths, decorative plantings, and a fence to secure the property. The BRA has provided $75,000 in funding for the project, and BNAN is working to raise the remaining $34,890 needed to cover construction costs such as masonry, fencing, site furnishings, plantings, utilities/drainage, and civil engineering. If funding is secured this fall, BNAN looks forward to completing the project and opening the garden by June 2015. The Uphams Corner neighborhood is one of the most densely populated in the City of Boston, with more than 54,000 people living within one mile of the Uphams Corner commercial district. The neighborhood has a long and distinguished history, having been originally settled in the 1630s, and becoming home to the first one-stop supermarket in Boston in 1915. The district has several historical sites, including the Strand Theatre built in 1918; the Blake House, Boston’s oldest extant house built in 1661; and the Dorchester North Burying Ground which dates to 1634. In nearby Edward Everett Square, a 12-foot bronze sculpture of Clapp’s Favorite Pear celebrates the agricultural history of this section of Dorchester. Today, the Uphams Corner neighborhood is experiencing a surge in reinvestment after decades of decline. The City of Boston is investing $3.1 million to improve streets, sidewalks, and public spaces, and new businesses are opening up to serve the tens of thousands of residents and visitors who pass through this lively crossroads each day. The Windermere Road garden will contribute to the overall revitalization of the area by bringing much needed green space to the densely built streets and an opportunity for residents to garden.

    Track Record of Success: BNAN owns 60 community gardens across the city, and has a well-established protocol for planning gardens in partnership with neighborhood residents, constructing gardens using high quality materials, and helping gardeners to manage and maintain the properties over the long term. BNAN gardens have long been recognized by City as valuable contributions to Boston’s neighborhoods, and this year Mayor Walsh awarded first place for community gardens in the 2014 Garden Contest to one of BNAN’s gardens. BNAN looks forward to continuing to partner with the BRA, the Fairmount/Indigo Corridor Collaborative, and others to develop community gardens along the Fairmount Greenway.

  • Wednesday, October 29, 10:00 am – Nature in the City and Stewarding Our Native Ecology

    The Annual Meeting of The Boston Committee of the Garden Club of America will take place Wednesday, October 29, at The Country Club, Clyde Street, Brookline, beginning with coffee and registration at 10:00 am, and the business meeting at 10:30 am, followed by a keynote speech by Peter Del Tredici on Nature in the City and Stewarding Our Native Ecology. Dr. Del Tredici is Senior Research Scientist, Arnold Arboretum, and Adjunct Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture, Harvard Graduate School of Design.

    “My research interests are wide ranging and mainly involve the interaction between woody plants and their environment. Over the course of thirty plus years at the Arnold Arboretum, I have worked with a number of plants, most notably Ginkgo biloba, conifers in the genera Tsuga and Sequoia, various magnolias, and several Stewartia species (family Theaceae). In all of my work, I attempt to integrate various aspects of the botany and ecology of a given species with the horticultural issues surrounding its propagation and cultivation. This fusion of science and practice has also formed the basis of my teaching at the Harvard Graduate School of Design (since 1992), especially as it relates to understanding the impacts of climate change and urbanization on plants in both native and designed landscapes. Most recently, the focus of my research has expanded to the subject of spontaneous urban vegetation which resulted in the publication of Wild Urban Plants of the Northeast: A Field Guide (Cornell University Press, 2010).”

    The program is open to members of the Garden Clubs which comprise The Boston Committee (www.bostoncommittee.org) who will receive written invitations with information on attendance fees.  If you are not a member, email info@bostoncommittee.org for more information.  Image from www.peterdeltredici.com.

  • Tuesday, April 29, 10:00 am – Boston Committee Spring Lecture and Luncheon

    The Boston Committee of the Garden Club of America will hold its Spring 2014 Lecture and Luncheon on Tuesday, April 29, at The Country Club, 191 Clyde Street, Brookline.  Guest speaker Catie Marron, co-chair of the board of directors of Friends of the High Line, and Vogue magazine editor, is the author of the recently released book City Parks: Public Places, Private Thoughts.  “We live in our parks, and our parks live in us.  Parks are where we make loose appointments with friends, where we smooth out our nerves, where we introduce our babies to the outside world.  Parks are of the earth, they are of the people, and they are first and foremost, free.”  Catie will escort us on a literary and photographic journey focused on the gift of Parks in our lives.

    Registration and coffee will begin at 10:00 am, and the lecture begins at 10:30 am.  An optional luncheon will follow the lecture.  Garden Club of the Back Bay members will receive a written invitation and a car pool notice in the mail.  For others who wish to attend, email info@bostoncommittee.org.

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  • Tuesday, April 29, 10:00 am – Boston Committee Spring Lecture and Luncheon

    Tuesday, April 29, 10:00 am – Boston Committee Spring Lecture and Luncheon

    Garden Club of the Back Bay and other Boston Committee club members will receive a written invitation to the spring meeting.  If you are interested in attending, and are not a member of a Boston Committee club, please email info@bostoncommittee.org for more information.

     

     

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  • Wednesday, October 16, 6:30 pm – Friends of the Public Garden Members Reception

    The Friends of the Public Garden invites you to a Members Reception on Wednesday, October 16, beginning promptly at 6:30 pm, at the Union Club, 8 Park Street in Boston.  The talk will begin promptly and the reception will follow.  During this unprecedented season of political change in Boston, come hear national parks leader Tupper Thomas speak about the critical role citizens can play to ensure the revitalization, protection, and well being of their parks.  Tupper was Administrator of Brooklyn, New York’s Prospect Park for 30 years, during which time the park was restored to its former glory.  She is a founding member of City Parks Alliance, a national urban parks advocacy organization, and an inspiring spokesperson for parks.  Those lucky enough to attend a past Boston Committee luncheon will attest to the power of Ms. Thomas as a speaker.  The event is free for members, but please rsvp as space is limited.  Email by Friday, October 11 at info@friendsofthepublicgarden.org, or call 617-723-8144.  Your membership can be renewed at this event.  Lead sponsor of the reception is Motor Mart Garage.

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  • Wednesday, October 16, 11:00 am – Boston Committee Annual Meeting Featuring Bill Cullina

    The Annual Meeting of The Boston Committee of the Garden Club of America will take place Wednesday, October 16 beginning with coffee and registration at 10:30 am, and the meeting at 11 am at The Country Club in Brookline. We are fortunate to have as our keynote speaker Bill Cullina, Bill is the Executive Director at one of North America’s newest and most exciting public gardens, The Coastal Maine Botanical Gardens in Boothbay, Maine. Bill’s topic is Sugar, Sex and Poison: Shocking Plant Secrets Caught on Camera: The world of pollen, poisons, pigments, pheromones, sugars and sex, and how they translate into sound into sound organic gardening practices.

    A well known author and recognized authority on North American native plants, Cullina lectures on a variety of subjects to garden and professional groups and writes for popular and technical journals. His books include Wildflowers, Native Trees, Shrubs, and Vines, Understanding
    Orchids, Native Ferns, Mosses, and Grasses, and most recently, Understanding Perennials, published in 2009.  Members of The Boston Committee clubs will receive invitations by email.  Garden Club of the Back Bay members will receive car pool notices in the mail. If you are not a member but wish to attend, please email info@bostoncommittee.org.

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  • Tuesday, June 25, 11:00 am – Ribbon Cutting for the Harbor-Link Gardens

    The Boston Committee of the Garden Club of America and The Boston Harbor Association invite you to a ribbon cutting for the Harbor-Link Gardens on Tuesday, June 25 at 11:00 am.  The event takes place at the old Northern Avenue Bridge in Boston, on the Seaport/Barking Crab side.  RSVP to Michele Hanss, Chair of The Boston Committee, if you plan to attend.  Her email address is m.hanss@comcast.net.  As you may know, The Boston Committee, through its Boston Committee Blossom Fund,  provided $50,000 in funding to The Boston Harbor Association to help create this new addition to Boston’s park inventory.  The Garden Club of the Back Bay is one of the thirteen clubs which make up The Boston Committee.  A website for The Boston Committee is under construction, and we will announce its launch here this summer.

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  • Garden Club of the Back Bay Announces 2013 Grants

    At the Annual Meeting of The Garden Club of the Back Bay, members voted to approve the grant recommendations proposed by its Co-Presidents Jackie Blombach and Jolinda Taylor and by the Executive Committee of the Club.

    Our major focus in the coming year will be the completion of the Linden Project on Beacon Street.  Over 60 historic linden trees will be professionally pruned, at a cost of $35,000.  $5,000 of the total will be paid with a grant received from the City of Boston, with The Garden Club of the Back Bay contributing the balance.  In addition to our tree care project, we will give $5,000 to the Commonwealth Avenue Mall Committee for its tree, turf and soil project on the Charlesgate block of the Mall, and another $5,000 to the Friends of the Public Garden to continue the inoculation of elms against Dutch elm disease.

    Other organizations receiving Garden Club of the Back Bay grants this June are the Boston Nature Center of the Massachusetts Audubon Society – $2,000 to support scholarships for its summer camp for children aged 5 – 14, $2,000 to City Roots/Urban Ecology Institute for a project in partnership with Roslindale Wetlands and the Boston Parks and Recreation Department’s Urban Wilds Initiative, $2,500 to the Esplanade Association for the Eliot Garden Project, and $1,000 each to the Charles River Cleanup Boat and The Friends of Copley Square, and $500 to The Boston Committee of the GCA, in support of a grant made by the Blossom Fund to The Friends of Christopher Columbus Park for a landscape design plan to beautify a neglected circle adjacent to Christopher Columbus Park.

    Finally, $1,000 has been set aside to honor the victims of the Marathon bombing through a donation to a healing garden at one of the area’s hospitals or rehabilitation centers. In the next few weeks members of the Club will visit potential grantees and assess where the donation will have the most impact.  We will report back when a decision is made.

    Thanks go to all our supporters, those of you who buy a ticket to our Twilight Garden Party on June 4, or a holiday wreath in December, for without your generosity, these worthy expenditures of $56,000 could not be made.

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