Proposed NYC Rules Threaten Community Gardens

Update 2010-07-28:


The Baltic Street Community Garden in Park Slope, as it appeared in July 2008. It was destroyed in 2009 by the NYC Department of Education.
Baltic Street Community Garden

The agreement that has largely protected New York City community gardens for nearly a decade expires this September. Community gardens fall under different jurisdictions, depending on whether they are in private hands, such as a land trust organization, or on land controlled by an Agency of the City. In advance of the expiration of the agreement, the NYC Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR, or simply “Parks”) and Housing Preservation and Development (HPD) have drafted revised rules for governing the gardens under their care. In short: gardens will have no protection.

Public comments are due in writing by August 10. To view the proposed rules, or to submit comments:

  1. Visit Proposed Rules on the NYC.gov Web site.
  2. For “Agency”, Select “DPR” or “HPD”.
  3. Click [GO].
  4. Click “Community Gardens” to view the Proposed Rule (PDF). Click “Comment” to submit your written comments online.

There is a community meeting tomorrow evening for gardeners and advocates of NYC’s community gardens to learn about the issues and what we can do in response.

Gardener’s Information Session
Wednesday July 28 6-8pm
Brooklyn Botanic Garden Auditorium
1000 Washington Ave.
Subway: 2,3 to Eastern Pkwy, or B, Q to Prospect Park  

Public Hearing
August 10 11am
Chelsea Recreation Center
430 W. 25th St (btwn 9 & 10)
Subway: C, E to 23rd Street, or A to 34th Street

The Campus Road Garden in South Midwood, as it appeared in August 2008. It was destroyed earlier this year by Brooklyn College.
Campus Road Garden

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Related Content

Community Gardens
Other Community Garden posts

Links

Notice of Opportunity to Comment on Proposed Rule (PDFs) from Department of Parks and Recreation (DPR) and Housing Preservation and Development

Take Action: Parks’ Policy Change Threatens Community Gardens, NYC Community Garden Coalition (NYCCGC)

New York’s Community Gardens Lose Protect Status, Threatened With Development Under New Rules, TreeHugger, 2010-07-27
Letter to Gardeners (PDF), NYCCGC, 2010-07-22
Protect our community gardens, EV Grieve, 2010-07-19

The 2002 Settlement

2002 Memorandum of Agreement (PDF), NYCCGC

Community Gardens Lawsuit Settles, The Municipal Arts Society of New York (MASNYC), 2004-02-09
Ending a Long Battle, New York Lets Housing and Gardens Grow, NY Times, 2002-09-19
Community Gardens in New York City: the Lower East Side of Manhattan offers a summarized timeline of community gardens in NYC from 1965-2002

Blooms and Bloggers: The Buffa10 Cocktail Reception

Part of Garden Bloggers Buffa10, Buffalo, NY, July 2010


Panorama, Buffa10 Cocktail Hour, Thursday, July 8, 2010
Panorama, Buffa10 Cocktail Hour

Elizabeth Licata, one of the organizers and hosts of Buffa10, opened her garden for a cocktail reception for early arrivals the afternoon of Thursday, July 8, the first official event for Buffa10. As enjoyable as it was to rub shoulders with other garden bloggers, it was a real treat to visit a garden I’d only seen online. This view was familiar to me, as it was to her other readers, from her personal garden blog, Gardening While Intoxicated.
56 North Pearl Street, Allentown Area, Buffalo, NY

Glam Shots

Impatiens X hybrida ‘Fusion Glow’?
Impatiens x hybrida 'Fusion Glow'?

Heliopsis
Heliopsis

Strobilanthes dyerianus and Ipomoea batatas
Strobilanthes dyerianus and Ipomoea batatas

David Austin Rose ‘Abraham Darby’
Rose

Jug
56 North Pearl Street, Allentown Area, Buffalo, NY

Slideshows

Related Content

Flickr photo sets: One and Two

Garden Stumbling: More of Buffalo’s North Pearl Street
35 North Pearl Street
Garden Bloggers Buffa10, Buffalo, NY, July 2010

Links

Gardening While Intoxicated

North Pearl Street, Allentown Association
Garden Bloggers Buffa10

Patrick Dougherty at BBG

I’m looking forward to this. Installation will take place from Thursday, August 5 through Sunday, August 31. The work is planned to be on display for nearly a year, through June 2011.


Press Release

Brooklyn, July 10, 2010—Brooklyn Botanic Garden (BBG) announces the commission of its first site-specific sculpture to celebrated artist Patrick Dougherty, whose massive constructions made of woven saplings and twigs conjure up the creations of Lewis Carroll and Andy Goldsworthy for their outsized physicality and whimsical charm.


Dougherty began developing concepts for the work during a July 2009 visit to BBG, when he selected the Plant Family Collection—the physical and horticultural heart of the Garden—as the site of the future work. The final design will be revealed when construction gets under way in the first week of August 2010.

Dougherty sees himself in the tradition of artists for whom the process is as important as the end result, and his particular artistic process engages the expertise of staff throughout Brooklyn Botanic Garden. To locate a source for the saplings required for the sculpture, for example, BBG’s director of Science, Dr. Gerry Moore, called upon his field knowledge garnered during the Garden’s 20-year study of flora in the metropolitan area. He settled on Ocean Breeze Park on Staten Island, about 13 miles from Brooklyn Botanic Garden, which has an abundance of nonnative willow (Salix atrocinerea), a species typically targeted for removal. BBG Horticulture staff will oversee removal of the invasive plant material over a period of days, providing the double service of facilitating Dougherty’s project and improving the balance of native species in the park.

During the rest of August, the sculpture will be brought to glorious life under Dougherty’s direction, aided by a corps of assistants from the Garden’s staff and volunteers. Some helpers will be scaling scaffolding to manage the vertical support poles; others will be instructed in the artist’s signature weaving process, which lends Dougherty’s sculpture its structural strength and visual dynamism.

Dougherty’s career melds his technical carpentry skills with his lifelong love of the outdoors. He began creating sculpture in 1980, fashioning single pieces in his backyard. Since then, he has created nearly 200 pieces for institutions and galleries. For more information about Patrick Dougherty at BBG, visit bbg.org/dougherty. For more information about Brooklyn Botanic Garden, visit bbg.org.

Contact: Kate Blumm, Brooklyn Botanic Garden
718-623-7241 | kblumm@bbg.org


Links

Patrick Dougherty at Brooklyn Botanic Garden
Patrick Dougherty

Garden Stumbling: More of Buffalo’s North Pearl Street

Part of Garden Bloggers Buffa10, Buffalo, NY, July 2010


9 (right) and 17 North Pearl Street, Buffalo, NY
9 North Pearl Street, Buffalo, NY

The first official event of Buffa10 was a Thursday afternoon cocktail reception, appropriately held in the Gardening While Intoxicated garden of Elizabeth Licata, one of our hosts for Buffa10, and 1/4 of the Gang of Four behind Garden Rant. Before, during and after, we were invited to wander – the Garden Stumble – the neighborhood’s streets, admire the architecture, and visit several of the gardens opened for us in a preview of Buffalo’s justly famed Garden Walk, happening this weekend.

For those attending Buffa10, North Pearl Street was our gateway to the architecture and gardens of Buffalo, a prelude to the abundance we would enjoy throughout the weekend. Front yards were mostly populated entirely by gardens. This front yard at 82 North Pearl Street was typically lush, with Hydrangea quercifolia (Oak-Leaf Hydrangea), Hosta, Hemerocallis, tall Lilium and Achillea, Bergenia, Lavandula, and many more species and varieties. I especially liked the use of Matteucia struthiopteris, Ostrich Fern, whose arching exclamations give movement to the garden more typically provided by tall ornamental grasses.
82 North Pearl Street, Buffalo, NY

The few lawns were more often surrounded by gardens, like this one.
45 North Pearl Street, Allentown Area, Buffalo, NY
45 North Pearl Street, Allentown Area, Buffalo, NY

Glam Shots

A lovely Rudbeckia in a sunny front-yard garden.
Rudbeckia, 9 North Pearl Street, Buffalo, NY

Lysimachia clethroides, Gooseneck Loosestrife, native to China and Japan, common in Buffalo gardens.
Lysimachia clethroides, Gooseneck Loosestrife

Lysimachia ciliata, Fringed Loosestrife, native to North America, which I’ve never seen before this, nicely used in a wide, shaded bed between sidewalk and curb. It’s a charming wildflower, one for which I now must find an excuse to grow in my own native plant garden.
Lysimachia ciliata, Fringed Loosestrife

Hakonechloa macra ‘Aureola’, one of my personal favorites for shady gardens.
Hakonechloa macra 'Aureola'

Cotinus coggygria, Smoketree/Smokebush, common in Buffalo gardens.
Cotinus coggygria, Smoketree/Smokebush

Slideshow

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Flickr photo set

35 North Pearl Street
Garden Bloggers Buffa10, Buffalo, NY, July 2010

Links

North Pearl Street, Allentown Association
Garden Bloggers Buffa10

Hope you like Petunias: The Erie Basin Marina Trial Gardens

Part of Garden Bloggers Buffa10, Buffalo, NY, July 2010


Panorama of the the Buffa10 visit to the Trial Gardens at the Erie Basin Marina in Buffalo, NY
Panorama, Buffa10 at Erie Basin Marina Trial Gardens

I arrived in Buffalo on Wednesday, July 7. I wanted to take in some sights on Thursday before the Buffa10 schedule began. I found myself at the Erie Basin Marina Trial Gardens. Even though we would be visiting on Saturday, I was glad to have a prolonged visit on my own.

Shortly after I arrived at the Gardens Thursday, I met Stan Swisher, one of the nursery managers there. We spent a couple hours talking about the operation, visiting the different beds. Stan showed me countless specimens, and gave me the back-story on several of them. Here, Stan shares with me the details of a double-flowered Bacopa.

Stan Swisher holds Bacopa 'Double White'

This is Echinacea ‘Pow-Wow Wild Berry’ from PanAm Seed. It’s short and compact, an asset for smaller gardens, but there are several cultivars available today with similar habit. What’s remarkable about it is that it grew to this flowering size from seed this season.
Echinacea 'Pow-Wow Wild Berry', PanAm Seed

Another interesting breakthrough is X Calitunia, an intergeneric cross of of Calibrachoa and Petunia. Riding on the Buffa10 short bus with Joseph (Greensparrow Gardens), he explained that this was surprising because the two parent genera have different numbers of chromosomes.
x Calitunia 'Purple Pink'

The Trials

When we arrived on Saturday morning, we were given four red flags on long metal stems. These served as our votes, one for each grower represented in the Gardens. Not everyone got the memo about “one per grower,” but we had fun walking around tagging our favorites.
Voting Flag

Stan told me that “the public likes pretty flowers.” The garden writers and bloggers of Buffa10 seemed to be no exception. Dahlia ‘Mystic Illusion’ was the top favorite of the Buffa10 crew. I think I may have voted for this, myself. She’s a stunner.
Dahlia 'Mystic Illusion'

Nevertheless, at least three of us tossed Juncus ‘Blue Arrow’ a vote. He’s a handsome fellow in his own right. The three of us being rather contrarian bloggers and gardeners may also have influenced our choice in this regard.
Juncus 'Blue Arrow'

The Winners

Here are the Buffa10 choices, based on votes.

  • Ball Seed
    • Delphinium ‘Diamond Blue’
    • Petunia ‘Phantom’
  • Danziger
    • Angelonia ‘Big Blue’
    • Petunia ‘Sun Ray’
    • Portulaca ‘Pazazz Tangerine’
  • Darwin Perennials
    • Achillea ‘Little Susie’
    • Achillea ‘Red Velvet’
    • Leucanthemum ‘Sante’
  • Proven Winners
    • Calibrachoa ‘Coralberry’
    • Dahlia ‘Mystic Illusion’
    • Ipomoea ‘Bronze’
    • Solenostemon (Coleus) ‘Spitfire’
  • Syngenta
    • Bracteantha ‘Yellow Strawburst’
    • Pelargonium (Geranium) ‘American Magenta Splash’
    • Penstemon ‘Phoenix Red’

Slideshow

Disclosure

During my visit on Thursday, Stan bought me lunch – a hot dog and a ginger ale – and gave me a lift back to the hotel. This had no influence on the content of this post.

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Flickr set
Garden Bloggers Buffa10, Buffalo, NY, July 2010

Links

Erie Basin Marina, Buffalo, NY
Garden Bloggers Buffa10

Twentieth Century Club

Part of Garden Bloggers Buffa10, Buffalo, NY, July 2010


A panoramic view of the walled garden of the Twentieth Century Club in Buffalo, NY.
Panorama, Twentieth Century Club

Dinner Thursday evening was at the Twentieth Century Club, a Buffalo institution that had its origins in an alumni association of the Buffalo Seminary. These roots were reflected in the walled garden, a cloistered garden, where we enjoyed a wonderful dinner and company beneath the shade of a huge mature beech tree.

Slideshow

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Flickr photo set
Garden Bloggers Buffa10, Buffalo, NY, July 2010

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History – Twentieth Century Club, Buffalo Architecture and History
My Favorite Buildings: 20th Century Club, Buffalo Rising, 2009-05-27

35 North Pearl Street

Part of Garden Bloggers Buffa10, Buffalo, NY, July 2010


Red Monarda, Beebalm, against a turquoise blue door in the backyard of 35 North Pearl Street in Buffalo’s Allentown neighborhood.
Red Monarda, Blue Door

This is one of the first gardens I saw in the Allentown neighborhood of Buffalo the afternoon of Thursday, July 8. Perhaps because it was first, it got extra attention. Nevertheless, I think you’ll agree it was worthy of it.

A simple design made practical use of a small, urban backyard. The hub and spoke design creates multiple focal points: a fountain, a chair, and the blue door. This is an important design strategy for making a small space seem bigger, part of our conversation on the “short bus” one afternoon. At the same time, it grants reliable access to most of the flowers beds for maintenance. A strong design like this works even – especially – when flowers are past and leaves are gone. And Buffalo’s notorious snows would highlight it further, when it’s not completely buried.
Hub
Fountain
Spoke
Path to Nowhere

Slideshow

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Flickr photo set
Garden Bloggers Buffa10, Buffalo, NY, July 2010

Buffalo and Erie County Botanical Gardens

2010-07-19: Added foliage section.


Part of Garden Bloggers Buffa10, Buffalo, NY, July 2010


Echeveria setosa, Mexican Fire Cracker, in the Desert House of the Buffalo and Erie County Botanical Gardens
Echeveria setosa, Mexican Fire Cracker

What a treasure these conservatories must be during Buffalo’s winters. Or on a rainy day like we had Friday. But we visited Saturday, with beautiful, if uncharacteristically warm, weather.

The perennial and shrub gardens outside were also beautiful. We didn’t have time to visit the arboretum.

Foliage

SambucusSweet Potato VinesFrondAgaveBuffalo and Erie County Botanical Gardens, Buffalo, NYBarrel CactusHosta 'Sum and Substance'Begonia 'Soli Mutata'AmsoniaTaxodium distichum, Bald CypressFern frondMicrosorum musifolium, Alligator FernEpiphytic BromeliadsCalathea 'Silhouette'

Slideshow

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Garden Bloggers Buffa10, Buffalo, NY, July 2010
Flickr photo set

Links

Buffalo and Erie County Botanical Gardens

Garden Bloggers Buffa10, Buffalo, NY, July 2010

2010-07-23: Added Garden Stumbling
2010-07-17: Added Erie Basin Marina Trial Gardens
2010-07-16: Added Twentieth Century Club
2010-07-14: Added Allentown Association Community Garden and 35 North Pearl Street
2010-07-12: Added links to articles in The Buffalo News


Links and placeholders for all the places I visited and saw during my stay in Buffalo.

Thursday, July 8

Hidden Treasure (Cary Street)
Hope Blooms (The Victorian, 200 South Elmwood Avenue, Buffalo, NY)
Gardens of Allentown:

Friday, July 9

Cottage District
Urban Roots
Japanese Garden, Delaware Park, Buffalo, NY
Bird Avenue

Saturday, July 10

Erie Basin Marina Trial Gardens
Buffalo and Erie County Botanical Gardens
Lockwood’s Greenhouses
Hosta Heaven

Sunday, July 11

Lancaster Avenue Gardens
Brunch at Jim’s


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Related Content

Flickr Collection of Sets of photos from my trip

Links

Garden Bloggers Buffa10

Garden writers and bloggers LOVE Buffalo gardens , Garden Walk Buffalo

Buffalo’s Gardens Speak for Themselves, Buffalo Rising, 2010-07-13
The Buffalo News: