ARCHIVES: This is legacy content from before Sustainable Cities Collective was relaunched as Smart Cities Dive in early 2017. Some information, such as publication dates or images, may not have migrated over. For the latest in smart city news, check out the new Smart Cities Dive site or sign up for our daily newsletter.

A Roadmap for Urban Agriculture


While New York City already has some 700 urban farms and gardens spread throughout its five boroughs, urban farming still feels ad-hoc, somewhat tacked-on in many places. The gains have been slow and future progress isn't guaranteed. To boost the long-term prospects of urban farming in the U.S.'s biggest city, the Design Trust for Public Space and its partner Added Value just launched a new report some three-years in the making called Five Borough Farm: Seeding the Future of Urban Agriculture, along with a companion Web site. The project seeks to create a comprehensive "roadmap" with the goal of helping stakeholders — policymakers, community groups, farmers, and designers — "understand and weigh the benefits" of urban agriculture, while making a compelling case for significantly ramping up local government support for this growing field. Basically, if you've been looking for a thorough examination of all the policy aspects of urban farming, this report is it.

The Design Trust for Public Space has had a long history of strategically intervening in the public realm in NYC. They were very early supporters of the vision of the High Line founders, and provided vital aid to them, which helped underpin their later success. The group has also recently been involved in redesigning NYC's taxis and creating sustainable guidelines for NYC's parks, buildings, and infrastructure.

The report authors argues that a more comprehensive policy approach is needed for urban agriculture because so many of NYC's urban farms are on city land. A "decentralized system of diverse, small-scale, community-based public spaces" exists in schoolyards, the grounds of public housing developments, community gardens, and public parks. As we know, the benefits of these spaces go beyond fresh produce. ASLA's recent Google Sketch-up animation — The Edible City – explains how communities improve the health and wellbeing of communities and help people better engage with their urban environments. But, unfortunately, in NYC and so many other cities, there's still a disconnect between official policy and the bottom-up grass-roots movement being led by gardeners, farmers, and landscape architects.

To remedy this, the Design Trust brought together nearly 100 experts in food policy, sustainable design, and public health. It looks like just about every major urban farm, community gardening group, and non-profit working on food issues participated, which gives their recommendations some real weight.

First, the group identified some of the obstacles to future growth. For example, farmers and gardeners face a whole host of "challenges obtaining critical resources" such as soil, compost, and growing space, as well as construction materials, financing, and skilled labour. More involvement by city farmers in policymaking could help alleviate some of those problems. Additionally, there are "race- and class-based disparities that hinder access to information, services, and funding" amoung urban farmers. It seems depending on where you are, neighborhood farmers in NYC get very different treatment. Furthermore, the city is doing very little to actually track urban agriculture so there's no good data on the scope of the field or its growing contribution to the NYC economy. Without a better understanding of how urban agriculture creates social, ecological, and economic benefits, it's hard to build more support for these farms. Lastly, the group said that the city government has little authority over coordinating urban agriculture, incorporating these programs into other complementary initiatives.

The Design Trust for Public Space and Added Value smartly focus on the need for better metrics. They write that while there are now tons of studies showing the benefits of urban farming, there is no way to track real progress on improving healthy eating, spurring physical activity, growing jobs, and building "community cohesiveness." As a result, they propose a whole set of indicators that the city should be methodically collecting data against annually. And to track this data well, the city will need to ramp up its own resources, with an enhanced position for the "food policy coordinator," who's success should then be tied to the growth of the burgeoning field.

Their recommendations, which are detailed over many pages, fall into a few categories. The first involves boosting the resources for urban agriculture in the NYC government. The group proposes strengthening the GreenThumb program, while making the food policy coordinator a true urban farming czar for the city. The second looks at how urban agriculture can be better integrated into city policies and plans. For example, shouldn't urban agriculture be better connected with NYC's innovative green infrastructure program, which just got almost $200 million in financing? Maybe all those green streets could also be used to grow tomatoes. The third explores how the city's vast roof-scape could be better used for farming. Stalled development sites, new developments, and existing buildings that can handle the structural load should all be real opportunities for rooftop farms like the innovative Brooklyn Grange. The last set of recommendations examines how disparities based on class or race could be better addressed, with more capacity building and information resources for poorer areas of the city.

This well-designed, well-written 170-page report is certainly worth exploring. See some of it online or purchase via Amazon. Also, read an interesting interview with Susan Chin, executive director of the Trust, by Metropolis Magazine editor Susan Szenasy, or one with Nevin Cohen, lead writer of the report, by Urban Omnibus.  

Image credit: Design Trust for Public Land and Added Value