Vancouver is planting orchards in public spaces. Seattle is laying out an incredible, edible food forest. Some London commuters can pop some peas and munch lettuce as they wait for the bus.
No, wait, that can’t be right: bus-stop edibles? Those guerrilla gardeners are at it again. While the Canadian and American food initiatives were launched with official support, the U.K. gardens are the gift of some visionaries who believe public gardens can transform a community.
The dream was born when one of Edible Bus Stop‘s founders, Mak Gilchrist, rallied her neighbors to plant a garden in a vacant, neglected South London space. She told BBC 40 people showed up with tools. They planted herbs, vegetables and fruit
Everything is donated. One neighbor even hauls off the compostable materials in the back of his Audi convertible. The result is a new sense of neighborhood pride.
Landscape architect and designer Will Sandy is the project’s creative director. His vision is for the gardens is “high-end aesthetics at low-end budgets.” In a guest post for Virgin’s People & Planet blog, he wrote:
[T]his is not just about growing food; it’s about connecting people and provoking thoughts in order to generate reactions. Green spaces allow you to slow down, breathe and take in what’s around you. They allow you to take time out from your daily routine.
People are doing that. In a Vimeo video, Jennifer Cooper says, “We half expected people to trash it, and nobody does….It’s touched people’s hearts so people have claimed it as their own.”
Neighbors keep an eye on it. They point to it with pride. They work in it, and they get to know and appreciate each other.
In an interview with the BBC, Gilchrist, says:
We have big plans. Our aims are to sort of transform all the forgotten spaces that exist along London’s bus network into valuable, community, galvanizing, growing spaces.
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Read more: edible landscaping, food security, guerrilla gardening, london, real food, urban agriculture, urban farming, urban garden, urban gardening
Photo from olizilla via Flickr Creative Commons
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Awesome! Fabulously wonderful and incredible. I wonder if they have a special chirp for politicians? Maybe…
This is a good story and a happy ending however the previous owner , regardless of whether or not what…
This is good information, thanks.
102 comments
+ add your ownGreat & bright idea.Thanks for sharing
Sounds good.
cool
I'm a Londoner and the this is the first I've heard of this, so thanks for posting.
Wouldn't it be nice if these gardens also grew in the wasteland of American inner cities and so called projects?
Aww.. Definitely not for Moscow...
In London You Can Eat the Bus Stop
Mr. Russell Crowe and Miss Catherine Victor love London UK!
Krasno
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This reminds me of a story this week where a man ate part of a bus seat causing £200 of damage. I know people are peckish on buses still I suspect he would of been a lot better served if he could of eaten the bus stop, the downside is the bus driver may forget to stop at the stop because someone has eaten and imagine how good an excuse that would of been for coming in late for school.
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