How an abandoned brooklyn lot will become a hub for student learning, urban agriculture

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 Brooklynโ€™s 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 gardenโ€™s development for about as long as sheโ€™s 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 cityโ€™s Education Department.

โ€œThe community saw it as an eyesore,โ€ Bove said. โ€œWe 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 โ€œlearningโ€ garden apart from a typical school garden, officials said.

Construction on a 2.2-acre learning garden near P.S. 312 in Brooklyn began earlier this year, according to officials. Photo: NYC Department of Education

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 cityโ€™s 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 farmerโ€™s markets and other community events.

โ€œLearning gardens are…

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