The Compost Coop - Join Today!

Thursday, February 03, 2011

This spring, Philly Compost and Sustainable 19125 put their heads together to bring easy, affordable composting to 19125. We’ll be launching the Coop and hosting our first meeting of the membership on May 12th at the Garden Center (Frankford and Berks) at 7:30.

But before then, we wanted to write and tell you a few more details about the program: how it will work,when it’s going to get off the ground and how you can get involved. And we wanted to unveil the winning logo, designed by Melissa Colossi and Ryan Tymbal of Tymbal Art. Check out their website to find beautiful hand-made clothing! Thanks to everyone who submitted!

The Compost Coop is designed to be easy — to help you compost your food scraps even if you don’t have the time or energy or space to compost on your own. Three days a week, you can drop off your food scraps at our specially built facility, at the Garden Center (Frankford and Berks). We’ll be open on Thursdays and Fridays from 4-7pm and Saturdays from 12-3pm.

Our facility includes a state-of-the-art composter, the Earth Tub, donated by Philly Compost: imagine a moon-lander full of dirt and food-scraps. Philly Compost provides compost pick ups for households and businesses around Philadelphia — they’re working toward a zero-waste future, for Philadelphia and for the world.

The Earth Tub will be sheltered by a structure, built by Greensaw Design, a sustainable carpentry company. They build gorgeous furniture out of salvaged wood, and they donated their time for this project. We’d like to thank them for their invaluable help — and encourage you to check out their projects!

Join the Compost Coop today! Working memberships are only $25 a year — that’s $2 a month. (Non-working memberships are $50 a year) Send us an email and we’ll get you signed up!


Kensington Farms Project

Sunday, August 22, 2010




What was once an unkempt lot strewn with bricks and litter will soon become Kensington Farms, a community-led project to introduce urban gardening and nutrition education to surrounding neighbors.

The lot is located next to the Fresh Start Foundation, a drug-treatment and social services center based in Kensington. Volunteers from Fresh Start, who have periodically maintained the property over the years, were out in full force during the City-wide Spring Cleanup to grade the lot with fresh soil. NKCDC, Fresh Start, and community leaders are now working to create raised beds to be filled with corn, potatoes, tomatoes, lettuce, and various herbs. Soil testing has been done on the land, but all growing will be done in raised beds.

"We want to assure neighbors that the food is safe,” explains Ade Fequa, the Kensington Area NAC Coordinator. In addition to Fresh Start volunteers, the farm team intends on identifying a handful of community ambassadors to regularly water and tend to the plants. Several neighbors have enthusiastically stepped forward, including Pastor Ronald Dawkins from Saved By Grace Church. Fruits and vegetables will be sold to Fresh Start, with the potential to partner with the Kensington Food Co-op in the future. The pilot project will last for 12 months, at which point neighbors and NKCDC staff will determine the overall sustainability of the farm.

This project is funded through a Community Leadership Institute grant offered by NeighborWorks America. For more information contact Jennifer Brodie at jbrodie@nkcdc.org.


Sustainable 19125 Big Green Block Initiative

Thursday, April 29, 2010

 

Sustainable 19125 is a broad and innovative partnership among community residents, businesses, and numerous government, nonprofit, and for profit partners with the goal of making 19125 the most sustainable zip code in Philadelphia. Sustainable 19125 works to simultaneously address health, quality of life issues, poverty alleviation, community interactions, and climate change adaptation. The 2009-2010 Sustainable 19125 focused on three initiatives: Green Blocks, Big Green Block, and the Walk/Bike/Ride Campaign.

NKCDC, the Pennsylvania Horticultural Society (PHS) and the Office of Sustainability identified the 20 acre site bordered by Front Street, Frankford Avenue, Palmer Street and Norris Street as a location for sustainable infrastructure and education. The area, dubbed the Big Green Block, was identified in order to leverage other city investments such as the new Kensington CAPA High School, a $44 million LEED Platinum facility that is the first of the region. The area was also selected due to its proximity to the Market-Frankford El. Improving the block meant making rail transit more accessible and appealing for residents, helping the environment while saving residents money on transportation costs.

NKCDC worked with PHS and the Philadelphia Water Department (PWD) to develop a master plan for the block identifying more than 16 locations and $2,000,000 in green infrastructure actions. This planning brought in a number of other organizations including the Department of Parks and Recreation to provide additional capital support to other areas of their property. To date they have added an additional $600,000 investment on the site.

The Pennsylvania Horticultural Society has completed installation of two storm water infiltration basins in the parking lot at Shissler Recreation Center (also located in the Big Green Block), which will capture storm water runoff from nearby streets and the parking lot. Trees were installed in these basins, reducing the amount of asphalt and increasing tree coverage in the area. In addition, the sidewalk along Blair Street has been extended from the dead-end by the parking lot to connect with Palmer Street to the south. A rain garden is also being planned for the intersection of Trenton and Norris. “The Big Green Block is about reclaiming land that had been inaccessible to the public,” says David Elliott, the PHS landscape architect who worked with the community to design the improvements. “It transforms the landscape into an amenity and not a safety threat.”

For the Philadelphia Water Department, the Big Green Block serves as a model for storm water management for the rest of the city. “The Big Green Block collects runoff from about 11 acres, removing in excess of 11 million gallons of run off from our system on a yearly basis,” says Jessica Brooks, a Water Resources Engineer with PWD. What’s good for the environment is good for residents, too - $6 billion in estimated savings which would have otherwise gone on neighbors’ tax bill. 

One of the aspects which makes Sustainable 19125 so unique is the vast collaborative effort of numerous partners. Along with PHS, PWD, the Office of Sustainability, Dept. of Parks and Recreation, Mural Arts Program, the Energy Coordinating Agency, PennFuture and many others, NKCDC worked to identify critical issues and present neighborhood-based solutions, economic feasibility and community benefits. This partner-based strategy served as a successful, innovative model that is being considered for replication within Philadelphia and at the national level and served to inform public policy and programs.

The Big Green Block is featured in a new video about Sustainable 19125, which debuted at the NeighborWorks NTI in Los Angeles.  View it here!