Resources
- What is Urban Agriculture?
- What is a Community Food Project?
- Why is Urban Agriculture Important?
- Urban Agriculture/Community Food Projects in DC
- How to Grow Gardens in DC
- Community Food Project and Organizations we like in Other Cities
- Films
- Books
- On the World Wide Web
- What is Urban Agriculture? from RUAF Foundation (Resource Centres on Urban Agriculture and Food Security)
- Urban agriculture from Wikipedia
Community Food Projects (CFP) are designed to increase food security in communities by bringing the whole food system together to establish linkages that improve the self-reliance of community members over their food needs. While at their root Community Food Projects feed people, but the mission of these projects is much wider in scope in that the project also empowers participants to use food as a mechanism for creating positive change both individually and for the whole community. CFP’s meet the needs of low-income people by increasing their access to fresher, more nutritious food supplies, increase the self-reliance of communities in providing for their own food needs, promote comprehensive responses to local food, farm, and nutrition issues.
- USDA Community Food Projects web site
- Community Food Security Coalition web site
- Why is Urban Agriculture Important? from RUAF Foundation (Resource Centres on Urban Agriculture and Food Security)
- America the Beautiful Fund, encourages volunteer citizen efforts and to protect the natural and historic beauty of America.
- City Blossoms, Baltimore and DC organization which connects children and youth to gardening, emphasizing environmental, cultural, and nutritional aspects.
- City Farm DC, DC urban gardening collective which connects private landowners with outdoor growing space to willing gardening partners.
- Master Peace Community Farm, a half-acre youth garden and farm in Riverdale, MD, (just over the DC line).
- Neighborhood Farm Initiative, a project to improve under-utilized green space in the city, and increase the number of urban gardeners in DC.
- Rooting DC, a free annual urban gardening forum.
- Washington Youth Garden, at the U.S. National Arboretum with a unique hands-on environmental science and food education program for local youth.
- White House Garden, Video from August 31, 2009. (we can't not mention this one ;)
- Sharing Backyards links people with unused yard space with those looking for a place to grow food.
- DC Community Gardens Directory from the Washington Gardener
- Map of DC Community Gardens from Community Walk
Don't know how to grow food, where to start, or want to learn more? Not a problem! There are great DC specific resources and many places to take classes and workshops all year round.
- City Blossoms offers monthly classes for kids and adults from June - November.
- Common Good City Farm offers workshops and multi-day courses on urban gardening, permaculture, nutrition and more.
- DC Urban Gardeners is an excellent up-to-date resource on how-to, events and offers an active listserve.
- Rooting DC, a free annual urban gardening forum.
- The Food Project (Boston)
- Green Guerillas (New York City), organization which uses mix of education, organizing, and advocacy to help people cultivate community gardens.
- GreenThumb (New York City), program of the NYC Department of Parks & Recreation which supports community gardens in NYC through materials, technical assistance, and educational workshops.
- Growing Power (Milwaukee)
- Just Food (New York City), organization to develop a just and sustainable food system in the New York City region.
- Rochester Roots (Rochester, NY) is creating a locally sustainable food system that ensures community food security.
- The Vermont Food Bank (South Barre) gathers and shares quality food and nurture partnerships that will end hunger in Vermont.
- A Community of Gardeners, Throughout Washington, D.C., people of all ages, backgrounds and nationalities are gardening side by side, growing vegetables, fruits and flowers in community gardens. Some are looking for basic sustenance, others for a way to remember their homelands, still others for a place to find a respite from their troubles. “A Community of Gardeners,” will explore the vital role of seven urban community gardens, not only as sources of fresh, nutritious food, but as outdoor classrooms, places of healing, centers of social interaction, and oases of beauty and calm in inner-city neighborhoods.
- The Garden, Academy Award-nominated documentary film about a community’s struggle to maintain their right to grow food on a thriving farm in a run-down 14-acre lot in South Central Los Angeles.
- Women’s Garden Cycles, film about 3 friends biking from Washington, DC to Montreal and back, visiting urban farmers committed to sustainable agriculture.
- Wilson, Peter Lamborn & Bill Weinberg, Eds. (2001). Avant Gardening: Ecological Struggle in the City and the World. New York: Autonomedia. Anthology of essays about the community garden movement, mostly focused on New York City.
- Cities Farming for the Future: Urban Agriculture for Green and Productive Cities. RUAF Foundation, IDRC, IIRR. Book on development in urban agriculture and how various stakeholders can get involved in the planning process.
- Urban Agriculture and Community Food Security in the United States: Farming from the City Center to the Urban Fringe. Prepared by the Community Food Security Coalition’s North American Urban Agriculture Committee.
- Urban Gardening 101:
- Organizations:
- Blogs:
- In the News:


