Suggesting that our food be produced where it is consumed, in cities and suburbs, seems somehow romantic, foolish and utopian. While we may never be able to produce all the food we need at our back steps, there is room for insertions, acts of radical agriculture, cooperative partnerships that supplement the industrial system while questioning its wisdom. One strategy is to foster partnerships between landholders and farmers, creating hybrid agricultural landscapes. These sorts of cooperative ventures can be found across the country - farms inserted in housing and parks, bordering playgrounds and wetlands, producing food for their immediate communities. This study examines some of the precedents, establishing a working framework for landscape architects and planners to create and preserve agriculture in the built environment.
Ellen Burke is a San Francisco-based landscape designer with a particular interest in productive landscapes and urban ecologies.
On Farming - Contents
BRACKET [on farming]
Line 13 – Superlinearity
Post-Agricultural Speculations
Vertical Farming in Las Vegas? Beyond Pragmatism, Toward Desire
AGER-AGRI
Farming [PARK]: Rail, Roadways, and Urban Form Today
Chia Mesa
Butter in the Mail: Experiments in an Epistolary Economy
Reforestation of Greenwood Farm: An Emergent Landscape and Intervention
GEOtube: Vertical Salt Deposit Growth System
Performative Landscapes
Cash Crops, Energy Landscapes
Ecologically Emergent Leisure Landscapes [EELLs]
Farm Logic
Precipitating a Productive Countryside: A Renewed Company Town Model
Hydrating Luanda
Migrational Fields: Farming and the Chinese Urban Village
Notes Towards a History of Agrarian Urbanism
Beyond Disney
The Catalog: From Ploughs to Clouds
Aquaculture Seascape Park
The Productive Surface
BLDG 2.0: Crowd-Sourcing Building Energy Performance
Nomadic Allotments: London’s Farming Future
Learning from Salinas (Hopefully)
Landgrab City
The Building That Farms…
Recycling Takes Command
What We Are Is What We Eat
Microcosmic Aquaculture
Cloud Skippers
Seasoned Pasture: A Demonstration Range and Public Park
Globalgaelisation
Living Tower: A Vertical Horse Stable for Luxor
On Farming
Project::Farm
Your Town Tomorrow
Food Matrix
Factory-Farmed Architecture: You Are How You Eat
Rethinking Urbanism in the Shrinking City of New Orleans
45°50’8”N 119°41’57”W: Hybrid-Poplar Farm
Harvesting Space
HydroLoops: Mechanization and the Command Prompt
Fructus Vegetabilis: Growing Profit in the War on Error