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Public Produce: The New Urban Agriculture
 
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Public Produce: The New Urban Agriculture [Paperback]

Darrin Nordahl

Price: CDN$ 30.00 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Product Details

  • Paperback: 200 pages
  • Publisher: Island Press (Sep 23 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1597265888
  • ISBN-13: 978-1597265881
  • Product Dimensions: 22.4 x 15 x 1.3 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 272 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #285,521 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

“A thought-provoking work about the food-producing potential of urban public space, and a worthwhile read for everyone who does food policy work.”

(Benjamin Thomases Food Policy Coordinator, City of New York 20090711)

“Nordahl is a visionary who shows how easily cities could promote urban agriculture to the great benefit of all concerned. This book is at the cutting edge of today’s food revolution.  Read it and get your city council to sign up!”

(Marion Nestle, professor of Nutrition, Food Studies, and Public Health at NYU; author of What to Eat 20090729)

“What Darrin Nordahl envisions in this lively book is nothing short of a revolutionary way of seeing cities, a kind of edible urbanism. This is a book that will likely shape the urban agenda for years to come.”

(Timothy Beatley Teresa Heinz Professor of Sustainable Communities, University of Virginia )

"Public Produce is a wonderful primer for students, planners, designers, and activists for food security and urban produce. Nordahl''s personal and down-to-earth style will educate and inspire the average citizen interested in food policy or urban design, and his expertise in urban issues will give clarity to professional planners and designers on this complex subject."
(Claire Latane ASLA Book Review )

"Darrin Nordahl, director of Iowa''s Davenport Design Center, has written a paean to urban agriculture in Public Produce: The New Urban Agriculture. Nordahl is an advocate of "fresh produce grown on public land, and thus available to all members of the public-for gathering or gleaning, for purchase or trade." Nordahl deals effectively with issues such as food literacy, maintenance, and aesthetics."
(Harold Henderson Planning Magazine Book Review )

“This vital book shows how growing food on public land can transform our civic landscape, sprouting the seeds of biodiversity, sustainability, and community.”

(Alice Waters Chez Panisse )

Book Description

Public Produce makes a uniquely contemporary case not for central government intervention, but for local government involvement in shaping food policy. In what Darrin Nordahl calls “municipal agriculture,” elected officials, municipal planners, local policymakers, and public space designers are turning to the abundance of land under public control (parks, plazas, streets, city squares, parking lots, as well as the grounds around libraries, schools, government offices, and even jails) to grow food.
 
Public agencies at one time were at best indifferent about, or at worst dismissive of, food production in the city. Today, public officials recognize that food insecurity is affecting everyone, not just the inner-city poor, and that policies seeking to restructure the production and distribution of food to the tens of millions of people living in cities have immediate benefits to community-wide health and prosperity.
 
This book profiles urban food growing efforts, illustrating that there is both a need and a desire to supplement our existing food production methods outside the city with  opportunities inside the city. Each of these efforts works in concert to make fresh produce more available to the public. But each does more too: reinforcing a sense of place and building community; nourishing the needy and providing economic assistance to entrepreneurs; promoting food literacy and good health; and allowing for “serendipitous sustenance.” There is much to be gained, Nordahl writes, in adding a bit of agrarianism into our urbanism.
(20090730)

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Amazon.com: 4.0 out of 5 stars (1 customer review)

17 of 18 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Public land for public produce, Feb 13 2010
By Peg Moran "Artisan Farmer" - Published on Amazon.com
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Public Produce: The New Urban Agriculture (Paperback)
Public Produce: The New Urban Agriculture may be ahead of its time. It poses an interesting question to city and town planners - and we, the residents: should local food production rank right up there with planning for local housing, roads and education?

Darrin Nordahl who has taught at the University of California Extension in Berkeley and now works for the Community and Economic Development Department in Davenport, Iowa, considers municipally sponsored agricultural projects a natural extension of the "post organic/buy local" movement. He presents some stunning projects to prove his point. Local governments can become a change agent in the area of local food production.

Mayor Richard Daley of Chicago, who reasons that "importing some food is different from importing most of it," houses a 200,000-member apiary on the green roof of City Hall. Sale of its honey supports local cultural events. Kaiser Permanente, the largest health organization in the country, opens Farmers Markets in thirty of its facilities from Georgia to Hawaii. The first, in Oakland, California, was started because a Kaiser doctor is convinced that "nothing is more important to people's health that what they eat everyday."

In Detroit, Michigan, 30 percent of the city's land is vacant. Community groups have converted these underused locations into local opportunities to produce food. Detroit's urban farming recently sparked stories in the New York Times. Seattle adopted a city-wide goal: create a dedicated garden site for each 2,500 households. Providence, Rhode Island intends to double the amount of food grown in and around the city in the next ten years. Des Moines, Iowa, has already moved beyond public food gardens to establish public orchards, grape arbors and a nuttery.

The author argues that "the sheer abundance of land within public control necessitates a hard look at how it can best serve the needs of the shareholders" and points to an "increasing number of public officials across the country who believe growing food is not only an acceptable land use, but necessary for the health and well-being of the community.

The future will hopefully be, as Nordahl suggests, a time when growing food constitutes "the highest and best use for land." The publication of this book certainly forwards that view of the future.
 Go to Amazon.com to see the review  4.0 out of 5 stars 

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