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- FUI is supported by a grant from the Swiss National Science Foundation under the National Research Programme NRP 65 "New Urban Quality"
AGRI-Culture – ville et champs, Geneva 2014
![Villes et champs 26022013 PLAN 1TO250_MT](http://www.foodurbanism.org/v2/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Villes-et-champs-26022013-PLAN-1TO250_MT1-505x356.jpg)
AGRI-Culture addresses three basic topics: the recovery and reclamation of water, the growing, planting, harvesting and
celebrating of food and the appropriation and animation of place.
WATER RECUPERATION
Rainwater harvesting is an essential component to successful
urban agriculture projects. …
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EARTHLING, SEEDLING – LAUSANNE JARDINS 2014
![Lausanne Jardins Persp2 130314 MT_flatten](http://www.foodurbanism.org/v2/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/Lausanne-Jardins-Persp2-130314-MT_flatten1-505x356.jpg)
Earthling + Seedling addresses the preciousness of resources such as water and energy, the cycle of growing, planting,
harvesting and enjoying plants for food and the relationships of people and place.
WATER AND ENERGY
Water is a resource which …
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Quartier de la praille, genève
![v03_211211](http://www.foodurbanism.org/v2/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/v03_211211-505x254.jpg)
Ce site est appréhendé comme une articulation majeure entre différentes formes et activités urbaines (concentration des grands axes de communication, plate-forme multimodale, quartiers d’affaires, quartiers d’habitations etc.), entre grandes entités paysagères identitaires de la région et espaces urbains genevois.
L’image …
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Brick City Urban Farms and EarthBoxes
![1063 Earthboxes](http://www.foodurbanism.org/v2/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/1063-Earthboxes-505x374.jpg)
Brick City Urban Farms began using EarthBoxes when they created an urban farm (with the help of the newly elected mayor) on an unused parcel of land in Newark. The soil on this plot was polluted and unsuitable for growing …
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Greenwich Village School GELL
![1098 PS GELL NYC b P2](http://www.foodurbanism.org/v2/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/1098-PS-GELL-NYC-b-P2-505x205.jpg)
In 2003, New York’s Public School 41 established a garden program through the collaboration of parents and teachers funding by local businesses. The school grows seasonal veggies and herbs, fruit trees, and plants native to the region. Most of the …
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PS 216 Edible Schoolyard
![1143 P2](http://www.foodurbanism.org/v2/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/1143-P2-505x216.jpg)
The design is a series of interlinked sustainable systems that produce energy and heat, collect rainwater, process compost and sort waste with an off-grid infrastructure. A mobile greenhouse roof covers 1600 square feet of ground in the winter and slides …
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