4.7 Article

Role of urban agriculture in the space-to-place transformation: Case study in two deprived neighborhoods, Haiti

Journal

CITIES
Volume 127, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.cities.2022.103726

Keywords

Urban agriculture; Place-making; Space; Place; Community; Deprived neighborhoods; Motivations; Urban greening; Green space

Categories

Funding

  1. W.K. Kellogg Foundation in conjunction
  2. LASPAU
  3. Harvard University
  4. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec (FRQSC)
  5. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec (FRQS)

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Urban agriculture has become a key element in the future planning decisions of cities worldwide. It is being experimented with as a means of transforming urban space into place, and this study aims to explore its characteristics in deprived neighborhoods and how it creates meaningful experiences for participants. The findings suggest that urban agriculture goes beyond meeting material needs and can foster a sense of place and community belonging in the studied neighborhoods.
While environmental and health preoccupations are growing, urban agriculture (UA) is becoming a key element in the future planning decisions of many cities worldwide. Beyond its well-documented environmental and socioeconomic benefits, this phenomenon is being individually and/or collectively experimented with as a means of transforming urban space into place (place-making) in both high-and low-income countries. Research wise, UA can lead to the questioning of official planning visions and principles. As such, this empirically grounded study aims to question the characteristics of UA in deprived neighborhoods of Port-au-Prince (Haiti) as fields for observing space-to-place transformations. It analyzes how UA programs create meaningful experiences for their participants. The findings are discussed in relation to place-making principles and suggest that UA goes beyond a simplistic approach of responding to material needs. In other words, UA is valued as a means of transforming spaces. Although UA programs are at risk of being co-opted, they trigger transformations by fostering a sense of place, community belonging, and re-imaging of the studied neighborhoods. The findings are useful for urban planners interested in utilizing local creativity to reshape deprived neighborhoods. On a wider level, further research should report on the long-term dynamics of the transformed spaces to evaluate their sustainability and forms of governance.

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