A rendering of what the planned learning garden near P.S. 312 in Brooklyn will look like.
Photo: NYC Department of Education
After a decadelong effort, the city will transform a once-abandoned lot into a communal gardening and learning space for students and local residents in Brooklynโs Bergen Beach.
The city broke ground on the 2.2-acre garden last year, and construction is now underway, said District 22 Superintendent Julia Bove, who has been working on the gardenโs development for about as long as sheโs been a superintendent. The concept came about after Carol Pino, a parent coordinator at P.S. 312, raised concerns about a nearby garbage-strewn lot, which was owned by the cityโs Education Department.
โThe community saw it as an eyesore,โ Bove said. โWe decided to make something that would be not only fitting for the students in the community but the adults in the community and the community at large.โ
The distinction in scale is a key part of the project, and the community focus will set this โlearningโ garden apart from a typical school garden, officials said.
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Having access to gardens or green spaces โ from indoor windowsill gardens to outdoor vegetable beds โ has become increasingly popular at New York City schools. Nearly 70% of public school buildings have access to such green spaces, with more than 1,200 schools reporting having a garden in the 2021-22 school year, according to the cityโs Education Department.
But the ambitions for the Bergen Beach lot stretch beyond just an individual school, or even the district as a whole, officials said. Plans for the completed garden include a greenhouse, a fruit orchard, an outdoor classroom, a pollinator garden, a composting area and a central space for farmerโs markets and other community events.
โLearning gardens are…
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