Toronto Star

Group turns vacant lots into movable feasts

Non-profit builds mobile farms on land awaiting developmen­t

- OLIVER SACHGAU STAFF REPORTER

Empty lots can be an eyesore in downtown Toronto. Tied up in legal or developmen­t hell, the gravelly abominatio­ns can stay empty for years, waiting for a building to cover up their ugliness.

A Toronto non-profit, the Bowery Project, has started taking those lots, while they’re in purgatory, and turning them into small mobile farms.

Using milk crates, the group takes advantage of the unused land, without having to worry about what might be underneath it, co-founder Rachel Kimel said.

“You don’t know the quality of the soil. Most often the land could be contaminat­ed, and just even to find out that and to remediate the soil is too much work and too complicate­d,” Kimel said.

Instead, the gardens are planted completely above-ground in milk crates. This has the added benefit of making the whole thing mobile, Kimel said.

“They’re super portable and light,” she said.

The group has two current gardens operating, one a partnershi­p with the YMCA at Queen St. and Spadina Ave., and the other in Alexandra Park.

Their third and latest garden will be on a lot on Sherbourne and Gerrard Sts., on a lot that has been empty for over two decades.

“There are people who obviously want this. It’s very nice to feel that way.” RACHEL KIMEL BOWERY PROJECT CO-FOUNDER ON TAKING ADVANTAGE OF UNUSED PLOTS OF LAND FOR URBAN FARMING

The site of a former Campbell Texaco gas station, the property is being turned into rental units, but currently dealing with red tape.

It was that lot that sparked the idea for the project in the first place, Kimel said.

“We kept on passing the same vacant lot all the time . . . Deena (Del Zotto, the other founder) turned to me and said ‘Why don’t we find out who owns that and grow food there,’ ” Kimel said.

They didn’t end up finding the owner, but the idea took off, and in a happy surprise, the owner contacted them later as their project grew more popular.

“It’s kind of crazy serendipit­ous,” she said.

Currently the lots grow everything from vegetables to herbs, with the exception of root vegetables such as potatoes, but Kimel said they’re looking into planting those in potato sacks and adding soil as they grow.

The fruit, or more accurately vegetables of their labour is then partly donated to the community groups in the area — they’re partnering with groups such as the Native Women’s Resource Centre for the Sherbourne lot, for example. The rest is sold to local restaurant­s.

After getting some attention from a BlogTO post, Kimel said the group is now getting inundated with people looking to volunteer, which she is entirely happy with.

“There are people who obviously want this. It’s very nice to feel that way,” she said.

 ?? CHRIS SO/TORONTO STAR ?? Deena Del Zotto, left, and Rachel Kimel co-founded the Bowery project, which turns vacant lots into mobile farms.
CHRIS SO/TORONTO STAR Deena Del Zotto, left, and Rachel Kimel co-founded the Bowery project, which turns vacant lots into mobile farms.

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