Sunday, August 25, 2013

Other Indy Urban Gardens

Over the past couple weeks I've been trying to visit a few of the urban gardens around the near Downtown neighborhoods.  If you ask around the 'hood, you might be surprised about the resources we have nearby.  I found at least three urban gardens within a few miles of our neighborhood, all very good examples of what can happen with neighborly support and input.  I've identified them below; future posts will detail the features of the gardens to start compiling a list of ideas we can implement on Olive Street.

In our neighborhood, we have the Southeast Model Urban Garden (as reported in a previous post) across from Fountain Square Center at approximately 924 Shelby Street. This garden appears to have a good foothold in the community with sponsors for raised beds among being very visible along Shelby.

Another very impressive local garden is located in Bates Hendricks at the corner of Lincoln and Alabama. This garden appears to be connected with the James A.Garfield School #31 / Phoenix Academy. It is a very well kept garden with a lot of nice features we could certainly use to improve 1341.
On the Near East Side just north of Washington & Oxford Streets (one block east or Rural) there is a wonderful garden connected to Englewood Christain Church. The've called it both, Gardens for Growth as well as their Nature Playspace and Gardens. And it's a fantastic community garden. A lot of good ideas are going to stem from looking at this space for ideas.
Finally, a stop into the Pogue's Run Grocer preceded my trip to visit another garden located just north of 16th and Sheldon. I know very little about this garden, but judging from the look, it's a very fine example of a lot of hard work and planning. And if you haven't been to the Grocer, I highly recommend heading over for delicious deli sandwich. I can't wait to help the Pleasant Run Grocer get established in our neighborhood if it's going to be anything like this place!

I'm hopeful that with these four nearby examples we can brain storm the best and highest use of 1401 Olive Street and provide a space for play and utility which can enjoyed by residents now and long into the future.  Stay tuned for more on each of these spaces...

Saturday, August 3, 2013

New Development on Volunteer Help

A couple weeks ago someone emailed me and offered to connect the Olive Street neighbors to a group of med students looking for a community service / beautification project.  The schedule would be tight, but I couldn't resist having 50 - 60 volunteers to put some effort into making HUGE progress of the 1401 pocket park project.  

As a part of the SEND MOU, we were asked to provide a plan for the future of the lot.  To date this had not happened, but with the tight schedule, we needed something to show the Med School Student Group. Although not all of the design features can be provided by the volunteer group, a comprehensive "master plan" was necessary to plot our course.

Over the past couple years, we've only very briefly discussed future plans.  We certainly wanted an area for kids to be off the street, perhaps a small "field" to play soccer or football, or to even shoot hoops.  We discussed providing a play area with sand box and swing set.  We also saw the value and benefit of a community garden, and simple beautification via landscaping and fencing.  Based on those core concepts, I threw together a plan which achieves those goals and while complimenting the existing vegetation on the lot:
The plan includes providing a mulched play area beneath the shade canopy of the trees toward the back of the lot while utilizing the sunny west side as the garden area.  The gardens would provide street side visual interest, while the shaded  east area would be reserved for kids to be well protected and away from the street.  A gated shadow-box style fence on the east side is both allows access and visual line of sight while providing a higher level of security to the play area from the alley.
Detailed features of the current garden design (see below) include 48" x 120" (4' x 10') raised bed garden plots, street front landscaping consisting of a decorative mulched area with low maintenance perennials such as proposed knock out roses, day lillys and hydrangea and seating features.  This area of the lot remains in the sun for most of the day.

Raised beds (above) could be sponsored (i.e. paid for) and tended to by local residents.  Seating could be salvaged and refurbished or designed and created by artistic neighbors, and perennial street plantings could be cultivated from yards within a couple block radius.  Room for nine large raised beds could result in a lot of fresh produce started in the spring of 2014.  Simple raised beds (below) could accommodate a large growing area.
The east side of the lot (below) would include a grassy play field in the center and a children's play area under the shade of the existing trees.  A large mulched area could accommodate a swing or play set and a sand box as well as seating features.  There is more than enough room to also accommodate compost and soil bins with lids to keep the contents dry.

Keeping our eyes peeled for salvaged play sets and sand boxes could make providing this feature a breeze (above).  Compost and soil bins (below left) are conceptually designed based on those features at the Youth Education Garden in the 900 block of Shelby Street (below right).

After visiting with Alan Hyslop, co-chair of the IU Med Student Volunteer Committee with Nathan Delafield, it was clear that we needed to prioritize things their group could achieve during their day of volunteer service.  We decided that their group would tend to weeding the lot, laying mulch in the front and back areas per the plan, planting some street front decorative shrubs and / or flowers, staining the existing fencing.  This work alone will really make the frontage shine and serve as a sounds stepping off point for the future of this community-based pocket park and garden.

Tentative IU Med Student Plan

Date: August 8th, 7 am to 1 pm.
Site: SENSE charter school and 1401 Olive St Pocket Park.
Numbers: ~80 volunteers from the School of Medicine; 2 head coordinators and 5 other volunteer coordinators; 10-15 other volunteers (if necessary).
Materials: 50 bags of mulch, 50 bags of top soil, bed lining, gardening tools, rakes, shovels, trash bags, gloves, trowels, trimmers, and hopefully some wood (if you needed this).
Plan: We will work on the SENSE charter school site first, making sure that the work is done there first. After we finish there (around 10-11 am or so), we will head to the pocket park and begin work there (spreading mulch, weeding, and planting flowers/plants or whatever you would like).


As we move forward, anyone with an interest in participating in the funding, construction, maintenance or use of the park should contact me to be included in digital updates as we post and issue them.