Tag: community garden

  • Saturday, June 15, 10:00 am – 3:00 pm – Gardens for Charlestown

    Explore the hidden gardens and public green spaces of Charlestown at the Gardens for Charlestown Garden Tour. On Saturday, June 15th from 10:00-3:00 meet the gardeners of this historic neighborhood and view twelve delightful and varied private gardens. Also, learn about our premiere public open spaces as the Friends of Harvard Mall talk about their historic park, while the Friends of City Square Park, the newest park created as part of the “Big Dig”, provide light refreshments.  View the Gardens for Charlestown community garden, which boasts creative urban gardening in small spaces. Proceeds of this tour support the Gardens for Charlestown, which is a 63 plot community garden and open space. Gardens for Charlestown is a non-profit, all-volunteer garden and green space organization established in 1976. For more information visit http://www.gardensforcharlestown.com.

    Tickets are $20.00 each and will be on sale the day of the tour at the Gardens for Charlestown. The tour begins at the Gardens for Charlestown community garden which is located at the intersection of Main and Bunker Hill Streets near Sullivan Square. The Sullivan Square Orange Line MBTA Station is a short walk away, and both the #92 and #93 buses which leave from Downtown Crossing and Haymarket Stations stop at the garden. Street parking is also available.

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  • Wednesday, September 7, 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm – South End Community Gardens Walking Tour

    This interpretive walk on Wednesday, September 7, from 5:30 – 7:30, will visit several community gardens, pocket parks and historic squares in the South End. You will learn about each site’s history and varied gardening styles; from vertical growing to season extending to contemplative design. Wear comfortable walking shoes and bring water and a camera. To register please call 617-542-7696 or email info@bostonnatural.org. The tour begins at the Berkeley Street Community Garden, at the corner of Tremont and Berkeley Streets in the South End.  Image from www.sprout-flowers.com.

  • Tuesday, June 28, 10:00 am – 12:30 pm – Urban Sustainability: Roger Williams Park Botanical Center and Beyond

    Join the Ecological Landscaping Association and University of Rhode Island Research Associate Kate Venturini for a unique insider tour of the Roger Williams Park Botanical Center complex in Providence, Rhode Island, an urban oasis nestled in the heart of the 427 acre park designed by Horace Cleveland in 1878.  Through a partnership between the URI Outreach Center and the Providence Parks Department, the Botanical Center complex is being transformed both inside and out as a model for sustainable urban horticulture.  Located on an island surrounded by man-made ponds, the complex features a newly designed and installed rain garden to capture greenhouse roof runoff, Rhode Island’s largest community garden, the future site of a permaculture food forest, extensive outdoor display gardens featuring native and sustainable plants, and the largest public indoor display gardens in New England.  This Tuesday, June 28 tour will cost $20 if you are an ELA member or $25 for non-members.  Please call 617-436-5838 to register, or visit https://www.eventville.com/catalog/eventregistration1.asp?eventid=1008073.

  • Tuesday, April 27, 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm – “The Garden” Film Screening

    Whole Foods sponsors “Let’s Retake Our Plates” film series at the Boston Public Library, Tuesday, April 27, from 7 – 9 pm. When bulldozers threaten a 14 acre community garden in South Central Los Angeles, concerned citizens unite and fight for the country’s largest urban farm.  This 2008 film takes an unflinching look at the struggle between urban farmers and the city, and powerful developers.

    The Garden centers around a community’s struggle to hold onto a fourteen-acre garden in South Central Los Angeles. The community’s struggle received widespread attention in 2004-2006, when the farmers were fighting the city of Los Angeles and developer Ralph Horowitz to maintain control of the garden, ultimately working to raise funds to buy the land. The community garden was established on government property following the 1992 riots and was the largest of its kind in the U.S.

    The details of the story provide great footage: a wealthy developer engages in a shady real-estate deal with the city of Los Angeles to acquire the property, a city council member helps push through the secret deal, tensions between the Black and Latino communities complicate matters, while the impoverished Latino farmers at the heart of the story struggle not just for land but their livelihoods.

    The fourteen-acre garden was originally owned by developer Horowitz but the city acquired it under eminent domain, paying him $5 million. He sued the city unsuccessfully but ultimately struck a back-room deal to buy it back for $5 million, despite property values having skyrocketed in the intervening years. When the farmers are forced to consider buying the garden, Horowitz raises the price tag to $16.2 million.

    The film is moving and expertly captures the intricacies of the farmers’ struggle. Where another documentary filmmaker might have shied away from some of the nuance such as divisions between communities of color, filmmaker Scott Hamilton Kennedy delves into the tough subjects, highlighting complex racial and political dynamics. Free admission.

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