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Tag: community gardens

  • 2 new gardens will improve drainage and help a Langley Park community, officials say – WTOP News

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    Volunteers shoveled up soil at one of two new gardens being added inside a Langley Park, Maryland, neighborhood that officials hope will benefit the local community in multiple ways.

    The gardens are one of four new greenspaces being built around the region through a grant by Natural Forward.
    (WTOP/Jose Umana)

    WTOP/Jose Umana

    Volunteers at a Langley Park, Maryland, neighborhood on Friday, Oct. 18, 2025.
    (WTOP/Jose Umana)

    WTOP/Jose Umana

    Volunteers shoveling up soil at a Langley Park garden
    Volunteers shoveled up soil at one of two new gardens being added inside a Langley Park, Maryland, neighborhood on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025.
    (WTOP/Jose Umana)

    WTOP/Jose Umana

    A picnic table
    Children were allowed to paint on the new log seats while CASA volunteers set up picnic tables.
    (WTOP/Jose Umana)

    WTOP/Jose Umana

    Rain garden
    One of the gardens is a rain garden, which collects and absorb rainwater runoff from roofs and driveways to reduce flooding.
    (WTOP/Jose Umana)

    WTOP/Jose Umana

    Volunteers shoveled up soil at one of two new gardens being added inside a Langley Park, Maryland, neighborhood Friday afternoon that officials hope will benefit the local community in multiple ways.

    The gardens — located on 15th Avenue outside of the headquarters of immigrant advocacy organization CASA — are one of four new greenspaces being built around the region through a grant by Natural Forward, a local agricultural group. One of the gardens is a rain garden, which collects and absorb rainwater runoff from roofs and driveways to reduce flooding.

    Alice Sturm, director of restoration for Natural Forward, told WTOP choosing the CASA headquarters made sense for its place as a community hub sitting in the middle of several garden-style apartments. It also was an ideal location due to the building’s structure, which Sturm called “the perfect place to demonstrate conservation landscaping.”

    “There needs to be water that’s being collected from an impermeable surface, like a roof or a driveway, that needs to sink in somewhere,” Sturm said. “So this is a big building, and it has a big roof.”

    The grant included $100,000 from the Klingenstein Family Foundation and contributions from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation and the Chesapeake Bay Trust.

    It paid for the materials to build a rain garden, purchase native plants to rebuild the organization’s community garden, payment for those who worked on the project, and garden kits for those who live in the area.

    Sturm said Natural Forward will also assist in training to members of CASA’s workers’ cooperative, the Workers Co-op Without Borders, who work in landscaping to help maintain both gardens. Swamp Rose Co-Op, a worker-owned cooperative based out of Silver Spring, did the work on the gardens and will assist in the trainings.

    Shannon Wilk, director for education for CASA, said the new gardens — specifically the rain garden — will do more than just make the area look beautiful.

    “There is an issue in this community right now with drainage,” she said. “We’re seeing drainage that is running off into residents’ basements. We’re seeing drainage that is making it into our sewer system after picking up a lot of pollutants.

    Landscapers from Swamp Rose Co-op arrived early Friday morning to start working on the rain garden. Cesar Garzon for the co-op said his team had to use special equipment, including a drill, to dig holes for the shrubs added to the garden.

    “We had a little bit of hard time here because the soil was very compacted, and years of mowing and just cutting the lawn just compact the soil in a way,” Garzon said.

    In the afternoon, volunteers and neighbors arrived on the secondary garden. Signs were posted in Spanish to let the community know about the new native plants added to the area. Children were allowed to paint on the new log seats while CASA volunteers set up picnic tables.

    With the neighborhood lacking greenspaces, Wilk said refurbishing its community garden through the grant will allow many to enjoy the space, just as the neighborhood children enjoy using its mini-soccer fields, basketball court and pool.

    “They are extremely social,” Wilk said. “They want a community gathering place where they can be safe and in community with each other.”

    Wilk said the success of the two gardens will hopefully encourage other organizations to team up with CASA to clean up other spaces in the Langley Park community, including a nearby playground.

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    Jose Umana

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  • A community garden is coming to a plaza behind Union Station

    A community garden is coming to a plaza behind Union Station

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    Over the past decade, Denver’s relatively new Union Station neighborhood was touted as both one of the city’s most desirable and least desirable places to live — a hub of luxury and a hotbed of crime. 

    A new Denver Urban Gardens community garden behind the station and above the bus terminal is the latest attempt to restore the neighborhood to its pre-pandemic glory, where restaurants and shops flourished and people walked about, sharing space and enjoying community. 

    Residents are excited about it. So is Denver Urban Gardens. And a bevy of public relations pros are touting the space as a sign that downtown’s back — a drum beat they’ve been pounding to keep the area active, so property values stay high, businesses return and everybody feels safer.

    And maybe, just maybe, if the community members have their way, the garden could even be a meeting place between the haves and have-nots. A space where tensions evaporate as people plant seeds, water plants, grow healthy foods, breathe in the air and decompress from a terribly tense few years.  

    It’s one of the first steps, driven by the community, in making the area above the bus terminal a place people actually want to be. 

    Next will be a stage, lunchtime concerts, more food trucks and other amenities the community wants.

    All this is welcome news to Laura Morgan, who has lived in the neighborhood through some of its peaks and slumps. 

    Roughly eight years ago, when Morgan moved from San Francisco into a Union Station apartment at the Platform, the area was poised to become the next hot place to live in Denver. 

    City planners, developers and urban boosters had spent years plotting the Union Station revival, with a new Downtown bus station below ground and a luxurious neighborhood with big-city vibes where everything was walkable above. 

    The new 17th Street Gardens behind Union Station is nearly complete. June 11, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    You could work from an office during the day; play at sports arenas, music venues, bars and museums in your free time; and live in stylish housing. Even better, on the weekends, you had easy access to the mountains on Bustang and the Winter Park Express.

    “(There were) a lot of people, a lot of population, just lots of booming businesses — people coming to be here,” Morgan said.

    As Anna Jones, manager of the Central Platte Valley Metropolitan District, put it, the area was “high-end and yet accessible.”

    ”Because you have Union Station and all the open public areas,” Jones said. “So it’s kind of where everything comes together. And it really did meet the mark of what the initial designers and developers were thinking.” 

    Morgan, benefiting from all that planning, liked the area so much that she decided to quit renting and buy a condo at the Coloradan.

    Then COVID-19 pummeled the thriving city center.

    The public space above the bus terminal and behind Union Station had been built for informal public gatherings, an area for the community.

    “It was intended to be a passive, enjoyable linger-in kind of space,” Jones said. “And as the pandemic hit, people emptied out.”

    Offices shuttered, restaurants closed. As winter came in 2021, people who had been camping at Civic Center Park were fenced out of that space and moved to the Union Station bus terminal, the public square built above it and the Great Hall itself. 

    Indoors, people without homes stayed warm, charged their phones and slept in relative safety many said they couldn’t find on the streets or in the emergency overnight shelters. For those who used drugs, they had a place where people could see if they overdosed and administer Naloxone, an overdose reversal drug.

    The new 17th Street Gardens behind Union Station is nearly complete. June 11, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    “When COVID hit, things definitely closed down a bit,” Morgan said. “And it was definitely a very interesting experience living here with not as many people and a lot more unhoused people, a lot of different kinds of drug issues that we saw daily, outside our front door.” 

    Complaints about safety rose as did drug crimes. Some downtown residents applied for concealed-carry permits or bought mace, afraid they needed to defend themselves. 

    Neighbors reported people using drugs while engaging in oral sex in the entryway to the bus terminal, rats gobbling cereal from boxes littering the gardens and pet dogs getting stuck by syringes.  

    In December 2021, the head of a transit union described Union Station’s bus terminal as “a lawless hellhole.” Bus drivers were scared to be there.

    Ever since, downtown residents, boosters, businesses and politicians have been struggling to bring a sense of safety back to the Union Station neighborhood. 

    In an effort to create safety, large granite benches above the bus terminal were demolished, giving people one less place to sit comfortably. 

    The open space where the community gardens now sit was fenced off by the Central Platte Valley Metropolitan District, creating a sense that the area was uninhabitable. 

    Some residents proposed the people living on the streets, who had nowhere else to go, needed more social services and healthcare or housing. Others wanted them rounded up and put in jail.

    The new 17th Street Gardens behind Union Station is nearly complete. June 11, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Listening to the loud complaints of neighbors, Mayor Michael Hancock’s Denver Police Department ramped up its presence. So did RTD’s police force. The transit agency also funded a host of environmental fixes. Private security patrolled the station itself. 

    And after Mayor Mike Johnston took office, he spent his six months trying to end visible homelessness in the urban core by bringing more than 1,000 people inside and permanently shuttering encampments through increased enforcement.

    Morgan and Jones are part of the latest effort to reenergize Union Station, this time by creating the 17th Street Community Garden.

    The gardens are being built in the fenced-off areas above the bus station, and while fences will remain, the unsightly, tall chain-link fence will likely be removed, if the Metro District has its way and the city’s planning department approves a new design. 

    “We have 32 community garden plots,” said Nessa Mogharreban, the director of partnerships at Denver Urban Gardens. “All of the plots are full with residents and businesses to take care of the space, grow food, grow community, and help create a human-based solution for the climate challenge that we’re facing as well.”

    Central Platte Valley Metropolitan District manager Anna Jones (left to right), Denver Urban Gardens partnerships director Nessa Mogharreban and 17th Street Gardens leader Laura Morgan sit in the nearly-completed 17th Street Gardens behind Union Station. June 11, 2024.
    Kevin J. Beaty/Denverite

    Anybody can request a garden, and 50 people have signed up for the list. All you need to join is an email address.

    Theoretically, the garden could be a place where the housed and unhoused can garden together. 

    “I think it’s going to be a really interesting experiment,” Jones said. “This is kind of the ultimate post-pandemic, urban exercise in equitable shared space. If we do this well, I am confident that we will be able to replicate this kind of model all over the country. I think it really is going to be a great post-pandemic paradigm shift that a lot of people are gonna look to.”

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