Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Bed Stuy Meadow Project

An interesting approach to beautifying one of NYC's neglected neighborhoods...

Project Description

The goal is to sow wildflower seeds on every single patch of abandoned soil in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Bed Stuy this April. By early summer, there should be so many wildflowers growing in the untended treepits, vacant lots, half-built developments and other tiny scraps of neglected soil in Bed Stuy that the whole neighborhood effectively turns into a meadow.

Wildflower seeds are very easy to plant, and they grow well in poor, shallow soils without human attention, so it's going to be relatively easy to make a huge visual impact over the entire neighborhood. The profusion of wildflowers that result from this minimal effort will be relentless and visually unifying, and this relentless unity of wildflowers will make anyone walking down the street feel good.

The Meadow is going to work because it doesn't work against what Bed Stuy is. Bed Stuy's low-slung, long-blocked character and the expansiveness of its territory are not like an urban jungle or forest as much as an urban prairie. The effort of the meadow is another chapter in the community gardening history of the neighborhood. Wildflowers are beautiful in the way that the architecture here is beautiful, the way the people who go out of their way to say good morning on the streets here are beautiful. And wildflowers are tough enough to grow wherever the seeds are cast.

Find out more here.

1 comment:

Mary Northridge said...

Ashley: I've been meaning to thank you for this amazing post for some time now. This afternoon I met with Erika Svendsen, my doctoral student who conducted the Living Memorials project that we viewed in class several weeks ago. It warmed her as it did me. This lovely project exemplifies the connections between community caring and human well-being. I also loved learning about the "urban prairie" that is Bed Stuy. These closing words of your post make me hopeful about the future: "Wildflowers are beautiful in the way that the architecture here is beautiful, the way the people who go out of their way to say good morning on the streets here are beautiful. And wildflowers are tough enough to grow wherever the seeds are cast." Devotedly, Mary