Urban Farming

Approaches to sustainable agriculture in several of the world’s largest cities

More than half the world’s population now lives in cities, but when it comes to feeding them, trucking in the necessary amount of food isn’t a sustainable process for any metropolis. Growing out of the need for better solutions, urban farming is becoming an increasingly common approach, whether resourceful groups and individuals are planting vegetables in a container on their back porch or are harvesting land as part of the burgeoning agricultural community.

With Earth Day around the corner, we decided to check in with seven farms in cities from Hong Kong to Cairo to learn more about their methods, and their outlook on the future of the industry.

Brooklyn

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“There have been backyard and rooftop farms here forever, but the current community of farmers, beekeepers, composters, etc., is driving an agricultural renaissance which could significantly change the way this city produces and consumes much of its produce. While urban farms will never replace their rural counterparts, they can contribute to the health of the local ecosystem and mitigate the intensive resource use of growing urban populations.”

The Brooklyn Grange Apiary Project will soon open with 30 hives, led by beekeepers Chase Emmons, director of special projects for the expanding Brooklyn Grange empire and Tim O’Neal of Borough Bees. Emmons and O’Neal will have a team of 12 apprentices working under a pay-it-forward program, wherein they’ll each take on an apprentice of their own to train the following season. Located at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, the forthcoming commercial apiary marks an expansion of the Grange’s four existing hives used to pollinate their acre of crops at the flagship farm in Long Island City. According to communications manager Anastasia Plakias, “bees can exponentially increase crop yield and quality, and the honey we harvested was a delicious added benefit.”

So delicious were the results that the Apiary was born, which aims to meet the demand for local honey and, says Plakias, “provide the city’s beekeepers with a local source of bees more acclimated to New York’s environment.” The challenges of loading hives in close city quarters increases the risk for their handlers being stung, but their hard work pays off for the rest of us—urban honey is known to pack a distinctly tasty flavor. Look out for the sweet stuff at their two weekly farmstands, Smorgasburg on Saturdays and in the Brooklyn Grange building lobby on Wednesday afternoons from 16 May.

Montreal

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“Cities could be self-sufficient in their food production if enough rooftops were utilized. At the very least, the average consumer is far too distant from their food sources, and the link between grower and consumer must be made closer and unshuttered. Consumers should know who their farmer is, how their food is grown, and have every assurance in the traceability and safety of the food they eat.”

Lufa Farms is based around a strong desire to provide local produce to the urban community of Montreal, founded by Mohamed Hage after he discovered the difficulty of finding fresh fruits and vegetables in a large metropolis. As a solution he built a 31,000-square-foot prototype farm on the roof of an office building where all produce is grown organically and chemical-free, and will be the first of many if Hage gets his way. Lufa currently grows tomatoes, cucumbers, eggplants and 22 other varieties of vegetables, including new additions like white pickling cucumber and kohlrabi, but the selection changes regularly.

Beyond the physical location Lufa offers a unique distribution program. Similar to Community Supported Agriculture programs that bring food from farmers outside an urban center, Lufa grows its food on an urban farm and then directly distributes its produce to recipients at drop-off locations in the city. This leads to a situation where, the company promises, “everything for customer baskets is harvested the same day as it’s delivered and is delivered directly to consumers at drop-off points,” for a system that truly embodies the most direct farm-to-table system possible in an urban space.

Manhattan

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“We’re very conscious of the materials we use, so aside from hand cultivators, shovels, gloves and hoses, we try to build what we can from recycled materials.”

Riverpark Farm grows out of Alexandria Center in New York City, utilizing all 15,000 square feet of their available space to accommodate a year-round growing season. Riverpark Restaurant serves up the farm’s bounty under the vision of chef Sisha Ortúzar, and chefs commune with farmers to get a huge variety of seasonal ingredients from soil to plate. While still a fledgling effort, the union has produced a cornucopia of foodstuffs from shishito peppers and watermelon to pickling cucumber and tri-star strawberries. Challenged with space and a fickle clime, Riverpark uses space-saving techniques such as intercropping and advanced seeding to increase yield.

Noting that the team is mostly composed of urbanites, Riverpark is nevertheless ready to employ the materials at hand. “We compost using our clean food scraps from the kitchen along with egg shells, oyster shells and coffee grounds, using both traditional hot and vermi-composting systems.”

Milwaukee

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“We encourage more and more people to not only support businesses that are using good, locally grown produce but to also grow their own. We are supportive of all the other endeavors in our region and have shared our expertise and experience and hope to see urban farming displace the need for giant agri-business and food importation.”

Sweet Water Organics started with the humble lettuce sprout. The exponentially growing outfit now farms four acres that sprawl over an old crane factory and adjacent land in the Bay View neighborhood of Milwaukee. While very much focused on greens (they produce 15,000 pounds per year), the farm also grows mushrooms and other produce in the summer months. The fruits of their labor is peddled off to co-ops, restaurants, groceries and sold at the local farmers’ market.

“Our main systems are aquaponic raft set-ups,” explains Todd Leech. “We also used raised beds, and coir medium sprout planting.” Sweet Water is dedicated to staying “as native as possible with all plants,” TK says, providing local consumers with crops outside of the standard fare. The farm also produces fish, a native species of perch acting as star of the operation.

Berlin

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“We are still amateurs on an adventure to find out what we can manage to do on our own. This urban garden is for us a form of living in the city, it is not just about nature and the countryside, it is also about places with a high density of exchange, different cultures and  forms of knowledge.”

Prinzessinnengärten is a 6,000-square-meter farm in the middle of Berlin focused on the aspect of biodiversity. “We have a lot of old and rare varieties, for example, 16 varieties of potatoes that you will not find on the market any more,” co-founder Marco Clausen tells us. “This we do also to make people aware of the problems of global industrialized farming, of monopolies of seed distribution and the rapid decline of diversity.” Plants grow in industrial vessels like recycled crates and rice bags, in a vertical garden or potentially soon, an aquaponic system.

For Clausen and the 20-person Prinzessinnengärten team, urban farming isn’t so much a solution for the demand for food, it’s more of a place for social learning. They feel the farm “functions as a catalyst of cultural change”, and by showing practical alternatives, they can “make people living in the city aware of the food production system they depend on.”

Cairo

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“Urban farms create green spaces that are scarce in cities, hence contributing to the oxygen production in the micro climate. Additionally plants grown on rooftops absorb a large amount of heat that would otherwise be absorbed by gray rooftops and black asphalt roads which is transmitted as radiation back into the environment increasing the temperature in the city.”

Schaduf is comprised of seven small, vegetable-focused rooftop farms in Cairo, run collectively by brothers Sherif and Tarek Hosny. Using hydroponic and aquaponic systems, their five-person team grows leafy greens—they’ve produced about 2,000 heads of lettuce in the past year—strawberries, red cabbage, local peppermint and a foreign variety of chicory endives, among other crops. While they do sell at local farmers markets, their greater goal is to move low-income individuals out of poverty by providing them the opportunity to own a profitable rooftop farm. Each is roughly 6×6 meters square, the micro farms allow them to detect problems more easily, and more carefully manage the irrigation systems. “It’s crucial that we do not have any water leakages to the rooftop,” Sherif explains.

Concerned with Egypt’s rapidly increasing water shortage, they use a no-soil system that consumes less water than traditional agriculture methods. They are also developing another system “based on permaculture techniques and philosophies”, says Sherif, that they will share with families already growing livestock on rooftops—a popular method in Cairo. Sherif affirms, “We want to try to integrate that existing practice with growing healthy vegetables.”

Hong Kong

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A stable city must be sustainable in every sense. It is extremely important that developed cities still produce their own food and support local agriculture. Imported foods is an unstable system that depends on a lot of external factors beyond an everyday person’s control.”

HK Farm is a flourishing new community-driven urban farming collective founded in March 2012 by former Brooklyn Grange farmer Michael Leung and a team of aspiring farmers, artists and designers. Focusing on rooftop farming and the important benefits of locally grown food, HK Farms is in the process of expanding the presence of urban farms in Hong Kong. Currently operated by a team of three, their 4,000-square-foot farm is getting off the ground growing a variety of herbs, with plans to expand with new vegetables to the lineup.

With a strong focus on DIY projects, all the growing containers were designed and built by the staff and ecologically conscious elements are being installed from the start, including a rainwater collection system. But as with any labor of love it is a long and extensive process according to the founders, “It was extremely hard work to accomplish the initial building of the farm, whilst balancing our own personal work and projects, and normal lives….We don’t consider ourselves farmers (yet).”

See more images of the farms in the gallery below.


The Art of Living According to Joe Beef

A new cookbook relays life lessons learned building a Montreal restaurant

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In so many ways, Joe Beef seems to fit with current restaurant trends. The team grows their own produce, sources their meat locally and buys from family vineyards, but Joe Beef is not new to the scene. If anything, it’s old hat—a study in history and a return to middle-class values in Montreal. Their cookbook (of sorts) couples recipes with legends, anecdotes with instruction, illustrating lessons learned in the creation of a restaurant. It also serves as a guide to Montreal and surrounding areas, with everything from lodging tips to itineraries to the best place to get a haircut.

David McMilland, chef and owner of Joe Beef, is everything a restauranteur should be—he’s gregarious, loquacious, a bit crass and a drinker. He knows what he likes and he’ll tell you what he doesn’t. When it came to leaving the upscale dining scene, McMilland and his partner Frédéric Morin wanted to keep it simple. “We just wanted to do a regular menu, you know. Six appetizers, six mains, interesting wines that we thought were interesting,” says McMillan. Surrounding themselves with the right objects was key. “We get off on silverware, oyster forks, Le Creuset pots, on beautiful ancient copper pots, the right banquette, an old mirror… If I wasn’t fucking running a restaurant I swear to God I’d shut it down and open an antique shop.”

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McMilland doesn’t see his decision to do old French recipes as anything incongruous. Considering the the working-class neighborhood of Little Burgundy where Joe Beef is located, molecular cuisine and square plates simply weren’t an option. “We would come off as guys who don’t know what they’re doing or have no sense of time and place, no education in history. ” Instead, McMilland and Morin, both family men with a strong sense of self-awareness, set out to create a small restaurant in a plain neighborhood that served great food without pretension.

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The book has recipes, sure, but the focus is on the life of the restaurant. “We wrote a book about running a restaurant, about gardening, about welding, about Montreal, other people’s restaurants, about old historic restaurants,” says McMilland. He explains that the joy of running Joe Beef lies in the fact that he can leave the din of the kitchen, go outside and plant some lettuce, or head down to the workshop to cut a cedar plank on which to serve a whole arctic char. “If you’re a fucking chef in NYC, and you run a big ass restaurant, Joe Beef is that restaurant you dream of owning.”

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McMilland is a diligent student of history, constantly pulling inspiration from old Montreal as the basis for his recipes. Several of the dishes highlighted in the book are taken from Canadian dining car fare. Patrick “Joe Beef” McKiernan, the restaurant’s namesake, embodies the spirit that McMilland and Morin try to capture in their food and in the culture of their establishment. A 19th-century Irish immigrant, Joe Beef earned his monicker through his ability to find food in times of need.

The original Joe Beef’s Canteen was a roughly furnished establishment that saw its fair share rowdy patrons, sometimes referred to as “The Great House of Vulgar People.” Though Little Burgundy has for a long time been considered and up-and-coming neighborhood, the rough edges remain. As McMilland soberly relates, “We had a guy on fire in front of our restaurant three weeks ago.”

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The food at Joe Beef celebrates meat, and so does the book to some extent—there’s a recipe for a sausage martini in the cocktail section—but greens are key to the restaurant’s vision. In the summer, McKiernan explains, “The appetizers are all piles of raw vegetables or roasted vegetables or vegetable salads or greens and mountains of asparagus.” If you’re eating a carrot at Joe Beef, there’s a good chance it comes from the garden out back or from McMilland’s or Morin’s personal plots.

The Art of Living According to Joe Beef is available for purchase from Amazon for $25. Tune in to see Joe Beef and other Montreal foodie havens on the upcoming episode of Anthony Bourdain’s The Layover, airing 26 December 2011.

Photography for the book by Jennifer May


Montreal – Live The Language

Un hommage aux excellentes vidéos Live The Language de Gustav Johansson, avec cette réalisation et collaboration de Xuan Pham et Roman Koscianski autour des richesses de la ville de Montréal. Des plans et un travail sur la typographie, sur la musique de Magnus Lidehall.



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7TV Russia

Voici une très réussie campagne de rebranding + identity pour la chaîne russe 7TV. Une création très colorée en stop-motion sur un sound-design de Nookaad Productions. Une conception du créatif suisse Greg Barth basé à Montréal. A découvrir en images et en vidéo dans la suite.



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En Masse

A Montreal artist collective collaborates with the San Diego Art Fair

En Masse, a Montreal-based art collective, has penned signature works in association with the Osheaga Festival of Arts and Music, Piknic electronik, Festival International Montréal en Art, Under Pressure, Manifesto (Toronto), Cirque du Soleil and Sid Lee, to name a few. Now the band of artists brings their talent to San Diego.

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From 1-4 September 2011, four of Montreal’s core En Masse contributors, Jason Botkin, Fred Caron, Kevin Ledo, and Kirsten McCrae, have been invited by the San Diego Art Fair to oversee the creation of a mural onsite in a dynamic cross-cultural visual dialog with some of San Diego’s finest artistic talents.


Dringdring

Hand-painted bike bells from a Montreal cyclist now available to all
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Since 2005, crafty Canadian Annie Legroulx has been producing hand-painted bike bells from her Montreal studio and shop Dringdring. Her inventive designs—from red-and-white striped candies to rotary phones—recently caught the attention of design shop Kikkerland, who added six styles to their inventory. Like the originals, these designs are painted with solvent-free paints that are as friendly on the environment as they are resistant to its elements, adding a guilt-free touch of fun to cycling safety.

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Where young people at local community organizations collaborate with skilled artists on Legroulx’s line, Kikkerland taps artisans in India to make their more accessible styles, which include an adorable cupcake and turtle, as well as a tongue-in-cheek speedometer.

Dringdring’s bells for Kikkerland sell online for $20 each. An assortment of other amusing bells can be picked up at Dringdring’s shop or their online store.


String Theory

Geometric-patterned scarves and throws by two Montreal textile designers

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Pairing mathematics with craftsmanship, the textile designers behind Montreal label String Theory weave quality yarns into beautifully-patterned super-soft scarves and throw blankets. The two-person team behind the brand works closely with small-batch manufacturers, allowing for wide experimentation with techniques. This artful combination of tradition and innovation results in everyday accessories with Modernist geometric appeal.

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Though the designers recently played around with a beautiful blue tone, currently String Theory’s Euclidean designs come in simple black and gray motifs, using mostly Alpaca, cotton and bamboo. Initial designs include intricate String Theory 101 scarf, which mimics the weaving process, and the Big Mess throw, an elegantly scrambled composition.

String Theory sells online, ranging from $120-320.


Above The Dust

Une très belle vidéo de Leo Zuckerman basé à Montréal avec “Above The Dust”, entièrement shooté avec l’appareil Canon 7D sur la bande son du groupe The Glitch Mob. Une session de riders au The Whistler Bike Park, à découvrir en vidéo dans la suite de l’article.



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Double Exposure

Dans le même esprit que la série The World Inside of Us, l’artiste Andrew de Freitas présente ces photos en double exposition créant un lien entre deux mondes. Ses photographies permettent de montrer davantage qu’un simple cliché. Plus de visuels dans la suite.



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Breakeless x ZOMBIEcorp

La collaborazione tra lo shop di Montreal Breakeless e ZOMBIEcorp verrà svelata il 3 giugno. Intanto pippatevi il video teaser.
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