St Petersburg rooftop.Image source. |
Philipp Brugner from the Austrian radio broadcasting dérive – Radio für Stadtforschung produced an interesting comment on the urban farming initiative in the second largest city in Russia: Urban gardening in St Petersburg often is a fight for survival. With 5 million inhabitants plus approximately another million illegal inhabitants, St Petersburg is the northernmost megacity of the planet. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, St Petersburg has been a boom town for jobseekers mainly due to its numerous construction projects. Nowadays the city is facing huge problems as a direct consequence to its boom. The city government is focusing on its own prestige with building projects like the Othka Center instead of tackling its socials problems: half of the population is living below poverty level, 6000 people are homeless and 1600 children are living on the streets of the tsar city. Furthermore the city is facing enormous ecological problems, where air pollution and insufficient garbage disposal are only the most apparent.
This is the setting the Urban Gardening
Club (UGC) has to face. The history of urban gardening in St Petersburg dates
back to the late 19th century when rural aristocrats moved to the
city maintaining their rural lifestyle. During the time of the Soviet Union
only retired and disabled persons were allowed to fulfil agricultural
occupation for their own use. Gradually the rules had been relaxed and at least
at the urban fringes gardens for personal use could have been maintained, a
development known as the Russian dacha
farming. After the collapse of the USSR, cultivating land has been a direct
result of the following years of crisis. Many could have only survived through
producing their own food.
Raised-bed gardening for horticultural therapy. St. Petersburg's Prostheses Center during the summer of 1996. Source. |
Rooftop garden on top of a school in 1996. Source. |
The UGC’s first project suggested using the roofs of buildings as croplands for socially deprived groups, due to the tricky climate obviously a very challenging endeavour. The big advantage was that the roof grown fruits and vegetables were less polluted with heavy metals than crops from the ground. Further projects involved cultivating the roofs of city prison with involvements of the inmates, or cooperating with primary schools and the St Petersburg Prostheses Centre.
Alla Sokol at one of the UGC's rooftop gardens against the backtrop ot the St Petersburg cityscape. Source. |
Although the city government has recognized
the value of the initiatives of the club, Alla Sokol, founder of the UGC,
points out that the government frequently obstructs new rooftop garden
projects, since it is very difficult to obtain the licence for using the
rooftop as farmland. Especially in Russia, rooftop gardening has a huge
potential, as many people in larger cities live in buildings with huge sturdy
rooftops constructed to bear the heaviest snow load. But many apartment blocks still
belong to the government. Moreover, in blocks with only homeowners, usually the
staircases and the roofs stay the property of the government. Therefore it is
vital for the success of the movement that the government is highly involved.
Furthermore the controls of the produce and
composting plants of the institute of hygiene hinder the proliferation of the
movement. Often they attest polluted crops although, as Sokol explains, the
tests the UGC has commissioned, attest that the vegetables from the roof gardens
are much less polluted than those that are grown on the ground. Within these controls, Sokol senses just
another administrative barrier.
Although low income, reduction of
purchasing power, and high prices force people into subsistence agriculture in
St Petersburg, urban farming has not proliferated over the city yet. Many still
prefer the long way to the countryside, to cultivate their dacha.
Russian dacha. Source. |
Article and interview with Alla Sokol via dérive – Radio für Stadtforschung, an Austrian
radio broadcasting.
4 comments:
amazing post! thank you!
Does anyone know how to contact them? I live in St. Pete and I want to help.
I don't have a personal contact to the Urban Gardening initative there but I can put you in touch with someone who has. Please write me an email if you are interested.
..if anyone still wants contacts, i can provide you with!
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