A blooming future for New York’s community gardens
The Green Apple
TUCKED AWAY in an unassuming corner of north Brooklyn is a 3,000-square-foot patch of open space. Keap Fourth, at the intersection of Keap and South 4th Streets, is a community garden established in 2013. It’s a well-known hub in this largely Dominican and Puerto Rican neighbourhood, perched at the edge of trendy Williamsburg. The sun is out, and “it’s nearly planting season,” says Crito Thornton, a volunteer who manages the garden, with a grin. After a long winter made worse by covid-19 there are finally signs of life in the daffodils blooming around the garden.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “The Green Apple”
United States April 10th 2021
- America’s boom has begun. Can it last?
- Corporate America weighs in on Georgia’s voting-rights law
- America Inc is on the hook for Joe Biden’s splurge on infrastructure
- The bumps ahead for Joe Biden’s plan to decarbonise America
- A challenge to male-only draft registration lands at America’s Supreme Court
- America tries to figure out a fairer way to select students
- A blooming future for New York’s community gardens
- Small cities in America’s Mountain West are booming
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