Campus Garden
The Campus Community Garden is a completely volunteer-run shared garden plot. In addition to creating an exciting nature-driven recreational experience for the campus community our mandate includes:
- Providing the campus community with food that is locally and sustainably grown. Our volunteers are invited to take a portion of our harvest!
- Promoting urban agriculture by teaching campus community members sustainable gardening practices.
- Contributing food security on campus by providing a portion of our harvest to the Campus Food Bank.
- Fostering a strong and vibrant community of neighbourhood gardeners.
Location
The garden is located in East Campus Village, across from Tamarack House on the Northside of 89th Avenue and between 110th and 111th Street.
Receive updates on upcoming events, workshops and involvement opportunities.
History of the Campus Garden
Sustain SU (then named ECOS) initiated the Campus Community Garden in collaboration with APIRG during the spring of 2003. This organic, shared-plot garden uses as many sustainable agricultural practices as possible to showcase environmentally-friendly gardening techniques.
For three years, between 2003 and 2005, the 244 square meter garden was shared between ECOS and the Garneau community. In 2006 ECOS' community garden merged with the Garneau plots to become one large cooperative garden (we do not have individual plots). In 2008 the garden expanded 4 meters to the north and now measures more than 300 square meters.
The funds needed to create and plant the garden in 2003 originally came from the Alberta Public Interest Research Group (APIRG) and a Student Extracurricular Activity Grant (SEA) given by the Dean of Students. Since this time, the garden has been funded through Sustain SU's Operating budget, with additional funding provided by APIRG.
Naturalization Site
Reclaiming urban spaces that have been inundated with concrete and non-native species, the Naturalization Project demonstrates ecological design principles that can reduce the 'footprint' of the University of Alberta.
The site is situated in the courtyard east of the Education Building cafeteria.
The naturalization project reclaims urban spaces with native plant species.
Naturalization Project Mandate
We will work to create a four-season retreat on campus that will:
- Demonstrate the ecological, social, and economic benefits of increasing biodiversity and incorporating native species in urban landscapes
- Demonstrate a landscape technique that conserves energy and water
- Provide a place for community members to experience a hands-on learning environment
Campus Garden FAQ
Naturalization, in the horticultural sense, means creating areas that grow plants native to the region.
Native plants are those that were present historically in an area within a naturally established range and were not introduced from foreign habitats by humans.
Using native species has the benefit of reducing the number of resources required to maintain a healthy plant bed.
- They are adapted to living here. The key factor that makes an indigenous plant bed more self-sustained is the simple fact that the plants are native to Alberta. Alberta’s long, cold winter season and short growing season - with periods of hot, dry weather- are not ideal conditions for many ornamental plants. Albertan plants, though, have lived here for thousands of generations and are quite hardy; they have evolved to flower in the short window of summer we experience here, they tend to re-seed themselves each year or adopt a perennial life cycle and they are usually quite tolerant of cold, frost and moisture stress.
- They require fewer resources. Native plants need much less water, fertilizer and attention to survive, as they are used to the unique Albertan environment. These reductions mean less time and money must be spent on maintenance, and the landscaped area is more sustainable.
- They are more resilient to Albertan pests. Therefore, if you choose hardy species that are appropriate for the conditions in your naturalized bed, you will not need to use pesticides to maintain your bed. As an added benefit, once your native species are thriving, they will choke out many weeds, meaning that herbicides will not be necessary and the "beloved" activity of weeding won't be as necessary.
- They require less maintenance. The reduced number of resources necessary to sustain an indigenous bed means that much of the bed's maintenance requirements and the associated costs are also reduced, in addition to lessening the ecological footprint you are creating in upkeep.
Due, in part, to the reasons listed above, there is a growing movement in North America for people to incorporate native plants into their own yards. Sustain SU, along with other campus groups, is in the process of making the University an active member of this movement. We are interested in creating naturalized plant beds on campus to show the many benefits of reintegrating natural plant and animal communities into our urban surroundings.
Contact Information
Campus Garden Coordinator
780-492-1648
gardens@su.ualberta.cain East Campus Village, across from Tamarack House on the Northside of 89th Avenue and between 110th and 111th Street.