The home of New Zealand's largest heritage seed collection now has a 200sq m model garden to get city dwellers thinking differently about the potential of their backyards.
The Urban Garden Project is the latest initiative from, permaculture research centre and organic seed bank, the Koanga Institute. Most recently the Hawke's Bay-based organisation launched a crowdfunding campaign to raise US$19,000 to fund the ongoing development of the project.
Head of the campaign Kat Gawlik said the team at the Koanga Institute felt people living in urban areas were not getting the nutrients they needed from supermarket food, chosen by stores for its "looks and shelf-life".
She said The Urban Garden Project was about showing people living in small spaces they could be close to self-sufficient through planting food in nutrient-dense soil. It also also aimed to show that people could make a modest income from a small backyard - whether that was through selling compost, seedlings, or "worm juice" (the diluted liquid from a worm farm).
She said the garden had been inspired by the findings of 1930s dentist and dental researcher Weston Price. Price studied the diets of indigenous communities and argued they had superior health than urban populations as a result of eating more nutrient dense and less processed foods.