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Environment

Your Asphalt Parking Spot Can Become a Blooming Garden Plot

By Ruben Anderson, The Tyee. Posted April 7, 2008.


We can pave our streets green: Wouldn't you give up your extra parking spot for a garden plot?
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The asphalt will crack and erupt, and green plants and vines will sprout forth.

No, this isn't my end of the world prophecy, this is about parking. Or gardening. Or both.

The street I live on has several apartment buildings and five houses. In other words, every person who lives on my street has underground parking or their own spot off the back lane. Yet the street is lined -- choked -- with parked cars. What's the problem here? Or rather, what's the solution? I am not usually one to advocate for another law -- in fact, I have considered running for office on a "One Bylaw Repealed Every Day" ticket. But, an easy way to free up space in our cities would simply be to require that if you have a parking spot on your property, you use it. Leave the public space for public use.

Mapping it out

So how much space is there, and what could we do with it? Google Maps shows my block is 850 feet long and a little quality time with a tape measure finds the distance between sidewalks is 41 feet, so in just one block we have 34,850 square feet to play with.

First, let's make it a one-way street, one lane wide, with a couple of pullouts. This maintains access for emergency vehicles, taxis and mini-buses for wheelchairs. We could also throw four spots for visitors into each block. At one end we can put a half-court for basketball, street hockey, skateboarding or rollerblading so once again shouts of "Car!" will mean the players get a short break. For the rest of the block, I propose gardens. We have enough space left for 150 very nice garden plots, each about 3 by 4 meters, plus walkways.

Or, we could continue to enjoy the heat rising off the asphalt, with the rich visual stimulus of dented bumpers and the sound of car alarms.

Volunteers anyone?

Cleveland, Ohio is a hub of Asphalt Gardening, where planter boxes are put right on top of parking lots, separated from the polluted soil and oily road by a layer of wood chips. This would be a great way to try Garden Streets -- do a block or two, then a couple of years later rip up the asphalt and put roots down.

I happen to live in Vancouver, where the city council passed a motion to have 2010 new garden plots by 2010. A handy graph on the linked page shows there is not even a dream of actually achieving it, even though it is a pittance by some standards. (The city-state of Singapore, for example, produces 25 per cent of its own vegetables.)

So call me the answer to Vancouver City Hall's prayers because 2010 new garden plots is only 14 blocks of Garden Streets.

Could we start street gardening without a controversial bylaw to eliminate street parking? Sure. The city could run a newspaper ad explaining the idea and asking blocks to volunteer. Let the citizens do all the legwork of convincing their neighbors. Using bio-intensive gardening methods, my block could provide all the vegetables needed for 22 people, plus all the plant material needed to keep the soil productive -- no need for chemical fertilizers here.

Tasty numbers


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a double bonus, at least
Posted by: aislinnluv on Apr 7, 2008 4:20 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
IF, and it's a very big if, the powers-that-be could be convinced that the path to righteousness mandated real public transport, universal, routes to get anyone anywhere he needed to go, it would be possible to get rid of millions of cars, obviating the need to clog up our streets with them. where i live, in a suburb outside a huge texas city, it is not unusual to see a house with up to five cars in the driveway and on the street in front of it. were i able, i would require that every car purchaser justify every car purchase, and just that "we wanted something new, or fun" wouldn't be justification enough. as it is, in many neighborhoods there is a "utility easement", a strip of land between the sidewalk (assuming you have one) and the street which does not actually belong to the homeowner but to the electric, gas, cable, telephone companies that service the neighborhood. this space could easily be transformed from blah extra lawn space to productive garden space (i realize that a lot of people have planted trees or other landscaping there - but shading a parked car seems less valubale than having strawberries or tomatoes immediately at hand). could we do this? would anyone agree? i would love to turn my little spot over to fruits and veg, and even to add a goodly portion of my front yard, but i suspect here in texas the plan would be viewed as some kind of "goddamn commie plot". sigh. i think less pollution from personal autos, greater availability of public transport (of which there is currently zilch out here) plus a juicy beefsteak tomato in my immediate vicinity would be a little slice of heaven. call me a dreamer....

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the only flaw I can find in this plan is the poison spewed out by road traffic will affect whatever
Posted by: Suzon on Apr 7, 2008 5:14 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
we grow. Nonetheless, I very much agree with all the author's suggestions. Not surprizing given that I gave up my car over 20 years ago with no regrets. If I do need a lift or a courier service, I simply reach for my LETS (Local Exchange & Trading Scheme) directory. Saves loads of money!

I also am lucky to have an allotment a five minute walk away, so I can grow fruit and veg. Sadly, one of the reasons that I have the allotment is that I wouln't eat anything grown in my own garden because of pollution coming from the traffic on an adjacent elevated road.

Next week four productive hybrid chickens and their coop and run should be delivered (organic free range eggs on the doorstep). I am not terribly worried (though not at all pleased) about pollution from the road traffic affecting the eggs. Eighty percent of the hens' diet will be fresh organic pellets and their drinking water will be fresh once or twice a day. An added bonus (besides the entertainment!) is the production of great fertilzer for the allotment's veggies.

I just want to echo the author's positive upbeat attitude. There is a great deal we can do to improve our own lives and the lives of others.

Go on, plant a fruit tree--even a window box is a start!

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Got this great idea!
Posted by: donl51 on Apr 7, 2008 5:58 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Except for the oldest above sea level area of New Orleans,we should build an artificial base above sea level held up by closely spaced thick wooden pillings not unlike Venice and build the entire city on these,w/canals and brdges,thus,the extremes of the weather won't bother the city anymore,no more dykes which eventually fail,from there we go to the rest of AMERICA rebuild underground w/skylites will definately be at a better temp,cutting down on utility bills,and plant on the surface,gardens,forests where applicable,grasses,the like,getting rid of a lot of concrete and macadum in the process,underground living conneted by electric trains,and on the surface,only eletric cars w./elevated roads,now of course this will take years to attain,it's designed as a replacer,everything new that's built,and in several centuries things will improve and it'll happen!...this is the kind of stuff sci-fi stories are made of and quite often life does follow it ,because sci-fi becomes science which becomes life!....It's do-able,...long ,but possible!

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Couple of problems....
Posted by: EllenM27 on Apr 7, 2008 6:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Sounds good in theory, but it's more complicated in practice.

One, who is the "we" that's going to take care of these public plots? (Gardnes require planting, weeding, watering, and some form of pest control, even if you do the latter in an organic fashion - gardens are nothing if not labor intensive.) Volunteer labor? Do you really think that stressed, harried, over-worked city dwellers will be able to make it work on a volunteer basis, beyond a small core of activist types who embrace the cause? It's fine to "set an example," but it begs the question, what good is the example if it never moves beyond example?

Or will you hire people, as part of the city budget? If so, where will the money come from, and what will you cut instead? Money for streets and other subsidies for cars? Sounds good, but how are people going to get to work without their cars? Public transportation? Okay, but first you have to make sure that public transportation is adequate, or trying to get rid of cars is a non-starter - that means back to the city budget, to re-direct money to public transport first. Most families I know have one car for each adult because they have no other way to get to work, period. (Sorry, but bikes are NOT a practical form of transportation for the vast majority of people - it's hard to bike if you have a long trip because you can't find a job close by; have to get dressed up for work, as it's uncomfortable to bike in heels and stockings or a suit; have to haul more than one child around; are disabled or elderly; or have to travel in all sorts of weather at all hours of the day and night. So don't say "bikes" will solve transportation problems - they're a small niche solution that distracts from things like trollies, buses, and trains, which serve more people in a more practical fashion, but which cost lots of money.)

Urban gardening sound great in theory, but there are more fundamental underlying problems - like lack of transportation - that have to be addressed FIRST, and it's going to be struggle. "Example" gardens may be a nice hobby, but they are not going to get the macro problems fixed.

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my biggest concern is toxins from cars/trucks/busses contaminating food...
Posted by: veggiegrrrl on Apr 7, 2008 7:01 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
my biggest concern is toxins from cars/trucks/busses contaminating food... of course, food is contaminated on farms and during the transportation process as well. any studies done on this? the pollutants found inside fruit/veggies grown near cars?

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Parking Space Garden Project
Posted by: Boone on Apr 7, 2008 8:20 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I had the same idea. Check my blog. Using Earth Boxes or the home-made equivalent, I believe that one could produce most of the vegetables that one would eat in a year in the space previously occupied by parking one car. We will be experimenting with this in Shoreline, WA this year. We will include a small portable greenhouse on part of the space to extend the season.

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but where will your visitors park?
Posted by: DeeOhGee on Apr 7, 2008 11:06 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and what about the families with one parking space but two cars?
I have a huge vegetable and fruit garden and I have to say the other comment is dead on. It's a hobby that maybe saves a litte money for a lot of time spent, it's not a lifestyle most people are interested in. I am more inclined to encourage window boxes and fruit trees along the sidewalk. Of course then people will complain about the fruit on their cars, but who gives a $#!+? Stop complaining, it's FREE FRUIT!! I bet if you lined the streets with apple trees, the apple industry would be up in arms too.

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since we're thinking out of the box here, why not go REALLY out of the box?
Posted by: Suzon on Apr 7, 2008 12:57 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
War is SO environmentally unfriendly, so if we grounded all the military aircraft why couldn't we grow food on the large flat surfaces of aircraft carriers?

An end to air miles and an increase in food production.

Am working up a little essay of my own on contemporary human activity.

Mostly wasteful, time consuming and security destroying.

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THAT Vancouver.
Posted by: billwald on Apr 7, 2008 8:57 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great idea. Now if you would only stop dumping raw sewage into the Straights.

When the stuff hits the fan people will be tearing up the front lawn and planting onions and beans.

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Parking lots can be prime cropland
Posted by: Roxsen on Apr 8, 2008 6:37 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Parking lots can be converted to prime cropland for SPIN-Farming. Developed by Canadian farmer Wally Satzewich, SPIN is a sub-acre, organic-based farming system that makes it possible to earn significant income from land bases the size of parking lots. SPIN is now being practiced by a growing corps of first generation farmers across Canada and the U.S who are taking up commercial farming in their backyards and front lawns and neighborhood plots. By re-casting farming as a small business, SPIN is helping to make farming an integral part of urban and suburban economies, rather than something a part from them. You can see some of these backyard and front lawn farmers in action in the gallery area of the SPIN-Farming web site (www.spinfarming.com).

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Thats fine if you live in an overly crowed city
Posted by: mindtrvlr on Apr 9, 2008 12:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Just get rid of the pollution spewing vehicles and ride a bike. Problem solved.

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A lot of my neighbors have fruit trees brimming with fruit...
Posted by: xconservative on Apr 9, 2008 6:14 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and don't even bother to pick it. There's a whole mindset that needs to be changed before anything like this could work.

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