NYC Parks Greenthumb Celebrates a Fruitful 2022 in Over 550 Community Gardens

 

 

 

Distribution Plant. Photo credit: NYC Parks

As New Yorkers prepare to turn the page on the past year, NYC Parks GreenThumb is taking a moment to look back and celebrate a successful 2022 community gardening season. Over the past year, GreenThumb has taken major strides to increase garden accessibility, connectivity, and food production, having renovated, rebuilt, and expanded 21 community gardens throughout the city, including eight “GreenThumb Community Gardens at NYCHA” projects; installed 290 raised garden beds for food production; and added 1,425 linear feet of accessible paths in 16 community gardens. This year, a major focus of the department was volunteerism, and GreenThumb delivered by organizing and hosting 44 volunteer days and 93 workshops, including 5 intensive training series attended by almost 3,000 participants.   

“GreenThumb community gardens are essential to New York City, and we are so proud of the work our team has put in this past year to enhance the efforts of our dedicated gardeners,” said NYC Parks Commissioner Sue Donoghue. “Dotting our cityscape, these urban oases provide expanded avenues to access greenspace for New Yorkers, central to our mission at Parks. We are committed to the preservation and betterment of our gardens, and we will continue to champion their success into the future.”

Bronx, Melrose, El Coqui Before/After. Photo credit: NYC Parks

“For decades, New York City has been fertile ground for the ever-growing community garden movement. GreenThumb is a proud partner with hundreds of volunteer community groups across the city stewarding places that strengthen our neighborhoods,” said NYC Parks GreenThumb Director Carlos Martinez. “These timely and critical investments amplify the social and environmental benefits provided by 554 community gardens. GreenThumb is committed to continue sustaining this citywide network of land stewards. Together, we are cultivating safer, healthier, and more resilient communities.”

PlayFair funding played a key role in the expansion of the GreenThumb budget, allowing it to expand services and staff in support of garden groups in 2022. Eleven non-baselined staff were added, over 40 gardens received new upgraded fences, 190 gardens received dedicated rat abatement services, and 39 storage solutions, including toolsheds, shelving units, and job boxes were provided.

Brooklyn, Weeksville. Photo credit: NYC Parks

In 2022, GreenThumb continued to support gardens and dedicated gardeners with supplies, technical assistance, and needed upgrades. Over the course of the year, GreenThumb delivered over 3,000 cubic yards of garden material, including soil, compost, woodchips, and mulch; distributed nearly 70,000 vegetable and native species starts, seed packages, and pollinator plants; and distributed over 4,500 gardening tools to Greenthumb gardens across the city.

Brooklyn, Crown Heights. Photo credit: NYC Parks

Established in 1978, NYC Parks GreenThumb is proud to be the nation’s largest urban gardening program, sustaining more than 550 gardens and supporting 20,000 volunteer gardeners throughout New York City. GreenThumb gardens create hubs of neighborhood pride and provide a myriad of environmental, economic and social benefits to the neighborhoods in which they thrive. GreenThumb’s mission is to support and educate community gardens and urban farming across the five boroughs, while preserving open space. By providing free garden materials, technical assistance, educational workshops, and seasonal programs, GreenThumb supports neighborhood volunteers who steward community gardens as active resources that strengthen communities.   

For more information about NYC Parks GreenThumb, visit: nyc.gov/parks/greenthumb.