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Archive for the ‘Environmentalism and Low Income Neighborhoods’ Category

FORTUNE Small Business: Eat my wall

Posted by hermanwong on August 11, 2008

Eat my wall

A vertical urban farm will seed community farming in a graffiti-scarred L.A. neighborhood.

By Herman Wong

August 8, 2008: 9:54 AM EDT

(Fortune Small Business) — George Irwin builds green structures for a living, but his latest project aspires to rebuild lives. This summer, Irwin is donating a vertical urban farm for residents of Los Angeles’ graffiti-scarred Central City East.

“Think of it as another way to make a community garden,” says Irwin, 39, a landscaper by training.

He’s installing four massive garden walls – a total of 750 square feet – in and around the neighborhood, including one in a high school yard and another at a local housing project. Each six-by 30-foot wall consists of 45 four-inch-deep, soil-bearing, irrigated vertical trays. Community farmers will be able to grow anything from strawberries to cherry tomatoes and melons.

Irwin estimates that each wall will generate as much as 400 pounds of produce a season. He envisions entrepreneurs opening “wall-side stands” and local youth getting work skills installing and maintaining the vertical gardens of L.A.’s Skid Row.

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Going Green in Harlem

Posted by hermanwong on December 8, 2007

The limestone bricks of the four-story townhouse at 459 West 140th Street have faded to a muted brown and gray. Its windows have been boarded or cemented shut with cinder blocks, the front entrance is shuttered with a metal gate, and its locks are a rusty green. The weeds springing from the cracked steps are the only signs of life. To pedestrians, the abandoned house reeks of decay, but change is coming.

The owners of the townhouse, the Harlem-based environmental group West Harlem Environmental Action, or WE ACT, have ambitious plans to make the 19th century house into a 21st century center for environmentalism. Eco-friendly buildings have sprung up throughout the city, but often at addresses far south of Harlem. WE ACT’s new headquarters, to be called the Environmental Justice Center of New York, will bring Harlem its first green non-profit community center when it opens in 2009, and only the second green building in West Harlem (the other is a residential complex). But instead of another monument to the Toyota Prius school of environmentalism — where buying green products and going carbon neutral has become the latest in lifestyle choice — the converted townhouse aspires to reflect the unique concerns of environmental activism in West Harlem, where warding off climate change takes a back seat to the more immediate realities of pollution and health.

To read more, please click here.

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