Montreal Gazette

Putting more green in urban landscape

- KATHERINE ROTH The Associated Press

NEW YORK Across the U.S., urban landscapes known for concrete and glass have been embracing foliage and flowers. And not just the occasional geranium-filled flower box.

Greenery-lined waterfront promenades have replaced windblown stretches of highway, gemlike “pocket parks” featuring flower gardens and waterfalls have replaced empty lots, and even blighted rail tracks have sprouted gardens brimming with native grasses and shrubs.

“I noticed it all of a sudden one day while walking to the Metropolit­an Museum of Art,” said photograph­er Betsy Pinover Schiff of New York City. “It was just a 25-block walk, and for some reason I noticed the gorgeous tree beds in front of a building. And then I noticed the tree beds in front of the building next to it. Each block seemed to be in competitio­n with the next, with these stunning flower beds and dramatic flower pots in front of the entryways. New Yorkers clearly love to enter and exit their homes and offices through gorgeous garden spaces.”

There are sidewalk gardens across the city, Schiff discovered as she wandered further.

She reports on the trend in her new book, Sidewalks Gardens of New York (Monacelli Press). Plazas and tiny parks tucked discretely between skyscraper­s offer respite to pedestrian­s; new waterfront gardens grace Brooklyn, Queens and Lower Manhattan; and enormous tree beds, planters and hanging baskets brim with flowers and greenery.

“In the city, a garden can be found in something as small as a window box or potted plants on a stoop. And the plant palette is now more diverse, expanded to include perennials and grasses with fourseason interest,” Schiff said.

Urban gardening isn’t just hot in New York, of course. Detroit has begun replacing abandoned buildings with green areas to counter urban blight; a non-profit, Greening of Detroit, has joined forces with one neighbourh­ood to transform vacant lots into outdoor education centres. In Atlanta, an ambitious Beltline project aims to convert 22 miles (35.4 kilometres) of railway beds into a biking and pedestrian loop and streetcar line.

The greening of cities reflects both public and private initiative­s.

New York City Parks Commission­er Mitchell J. Silver credits community gardeners for much of the transforma­tion there.

For instance, Bill LoSasso is director of the GreenThumb community garden program, which has 600 community gardens and 20,000 gardeners throughout the city.

“Our phones are ringing off the hook with people who want to start a garden or join a garden or learn about gardening,” he said.

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