open access publication

Chapter, 2024

The Rise and Fall of Public Urban Gardens: Four Cases from in and around Copenhagen

Urban Agriculture in Public Space 978-3-031-41549-4, 978-3-031-41550-0, Pages 101-115

Editors: Deni Ruggeri; Beata Sirowy

Series: GeoJournal Library ISSN 2215-0072, 0924-5499, 2215-0072, 0924-5499, Volume 132, Pages 101-115

Publisher: Springer Nature

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-41550-0_5

Contributors

Lamm, Bettina 0000-0002-8942-690X (Corresponding author) [1] Tietjen, Anne [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Copenhagen
  2. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

This chapter presents four cases of urban garden projects in and around Copenhagen, Denmark, started between 2011 and 2013: Prags Have, Byhaven 2200, Byhaven Sundholm, and Havnehaverne. All four urban gardens were community-based and public, yet they varied widely in their organisation, management, funding, and status of the sites they occupied. While two of the gardens were started by cultural activists, the others were the initiative of the municipality and a private land developer. All of them shared a vision of not only growing produce but also integrating spaces for social inclusion and community gatherings. Looking into their underlying value system and organisational structure allows us to compare how the different typologies of urban gardens would impact their ability to thrive and flourish. The authors were particularly interested in the agendas pursued by the communities who managed them, how these agendas related to the specific site and context, and how the communities negotiated public access requirements with creating an enduring gardening community. As both bottom-up projects closed after 4 to 6 years, it is relevant to look into what resources were needed to run them and what led to their ultimate closure.

Keywords

Copenhagen, Denmark, PrAg, access requirements, activists, agenda, authors, cases, closure, community, community gatherings, community-based, context, cultural activists, development, fall, funding, garden, garden community, garden project, gathering, inclusion, initiation, land development, management, municipalities, organisational structure, organisations, private land development, project, requirements, resources, rise, sites, social inclusion, space, status, structure, typology, urban gardening projects, urban gardens, vision, years

Data Provider: Digital Science