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Community Gardens.Neighborhood Advisory Committee Garden
Description

Located in the Mott Haven section of the Bronx, community members enjoy an assortment of events and activities at this community garden, which is one of 64 New York City gardens protected by the Trust for Public Land. This garden was founded more than 15 years ago by the Neighborhood Advisory Committee, a division of the Community Resource Center for the Developmentally Disabled. The Committee believed that a garden filled with the soothing sights and sounds of nature was the perfect way to bring the community together. As a result, local residents and members of the Ranch Leadership Program of N.Y. Founding Hospital, the Immaculate Conception School/Head Start program and the "I Have a Dream" program spend time together relaxing in the garden.

The garden hosts various community functions including summer arts and crafts workshops and holiday barbeques. In the fall, people come to see the monarch butterflies that flock to the garden.s butterfly bush.

This is a project of the Trust for Public Land's Parks for People initiative, which works to ensure that everyone enjoys access to a park, playground, or open space. The philosophy and structure behind the Parks for People.New York City is illustrated in the paragraphs below.

Parks for People.New York City

Identifying the Need

According to the City of New York Department of Planning, 16 of the 18 lowest income Community Board Districts have less than 2.5 acres of open space per thousand residents, which is below the common urban open space standard. Maps developed by the TPL clearly show that the need for safe, accessible parkland is greatest in low-income, high-density neighborhoods. Therefore, this is where the TPL Parks for People program focuses its efforts to create new access to playgrounds, community gardens, and open space.

Acquiring the Land

In 1999, New York City was set to destroy more than 100 community gardens through a public auction. In a last-minute deal reached with the city, TPL agreed to purchase 62 of the gardens. TPL now owns and manages 64 gardens in New York City.

Garden Management and Community Involvement

In 2004, TPL created three nonprofit organizations to take over the ownership and management of the gardens. The Bronx (16 gardens), Brooklyn/Queens (34 gardens), and Manhattan (14 gardens) land trusts each hire staff to work with the boards of directors to raise funds and manage the land trusts. The 15-person board of directors for each land trust includes gardeners and experts elected by the garden members. The boards have the principal responsibility for leading and managing all aspects of the land trusts. Each land trust received $200,000 in start-up funds from TPL and will have opportunities in the future to acquire additional open spaces.

TPL.s goal for the Parks for People program is to invest in each garden to ensure it becomes.and remains.a strong and viable public resource that involves the surrounding community and is responsive to its needs. TPL, through the land trusts, supports grassroots groups that manage gardens, and engages gardeners and civic leaders in long-term oversight of the gardens.



Goal

Protect open space for urban residents