Has anyone in Ithaca tapped into this funding pool?

"New York State has subsidies both for roofs with succulents spread out over a 
thin layer of soil and for edible plants covering a smaller area."

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/17/dining/17roof.html?pagewanted=all
Urban Farming, a Bit Closer to the Sun 
 Peter DaSilva for The New York Times
COVER CAP Maya Donelson tends the rooftop garden of Glide Memorial Church in 
San Francisco. 

Published: June 16, 2009 
THIS summer, Tony Tomelden hopes to be making bloody marys at the Pug in 
Washington, D.C., with tomatoes and chilies grown above the bar, thanks to the 
city’s incentives for green roofs. 

Andrew Wilson
Children hold carrots grown in the Glide rooftop garden. 

Enlarge This Image
 
Robert Wright for The New York Times
SHARING THE BOUNTY Paula Crossfield persuaded her neighbors to grow vegetables 
high above the Lower East Side. 

Enlarge This Image
 
Noah Berger for The New York Times
Aly and Lee Utterbach grow tomatoes above their home in San Francisco. 

Enlarge This Image
 
Robert Wright for The New York Times
ASPARAGUS MEMORIES Peter Bergold likes the growing season at his Brooklyn 
brownstone. 

Enlarge This Image
 
Andrew McCaughan
Rick Bayles, in Chicago, grows tomatoes for the Rooftop Salsa he serves at 
Frontera. 
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Mr. Tomelden, the Pug’s principal owner, says he’s planting a garden to take 
advantage of tax subsidies the city offers in his neighborhood if he covers his 
roof with plants. 

“If I can do something in my corner for the environment, that seemed a 
reasonable thing to do,” he said. “Plus I can save money on the tomatoes.”

There won’t be bloody marys at P.S. 6 on New York’s Upper East Side, but 
one-third of its roof will be planted with vegetables and herbs next spring for 
the cafeteria. The school is using about $950,000 in city funds that it has put 
aside, and parents and alumni are providing almost a half-million dollars more. 

“For the children, it’s exciting when you grow something edible,” said the 
school’s principal, Lauren Fontana. 

Aeries are cropping up on America’s skylines, filled with the promise of juicy 
tomatoes, tiny Alpine strawberries and the heady perfume of basil and lavender. 
High above the noise and grime of urban streets, gardeners are raising fruits 
and vegetables. Some are simply finding the joys of backyard gardens several 
stories up, others are doing it for the environment and some because they know 
local food sells well. 

City dwellers have long cultivated pots of tomatoes on top of their buildings. 
But farming in the sky is a fairly recent development in the green roof 
movement, in which owners have been encouraged to replace blacktop with plants, 
often just carpets of succulents, to cut down on storm runoff, insulate 
buildings and moderate urban heat. 

A survey by Green Roofs for Healthy Cities, which represents companies that 
create green roofs, found the number of projects its members had worked on in 
the United States grew by more than 35 percent last year. In total, the green 
roofs installed last year cover 6 million to 10 million square feet, the group 
said.

Steven Peck, its president, said he had no figures for how many of the projects 
involved fruits and vegetables, but interest is growing. “When we had a session 
on urban agriculture,” he said of a meeting of the group in Atlanta last month, 
“it was standing room only.” Mr. Peck said the association is forming a 
committee on rooftop agriculture.

Tax incentives have accelerated the plantings of green roofs, particularly in 
Chicago, which has encouraged green roofs for almost a decade. The Chicago chef 
Rick Bayless uses tomatoes and chilies he grows atop his restaurant Frontera 
Grill to make Rooftop Salsa.

New York State has subsidies both for roofs with succulents spread out over a 
thin layer of soil and for edible plants covering a smaller area. A proposed 
amendment to New York City’s tax abatement for some roof projects would include 
green roofs. Most roof gardeners aren’t in it for the money, though.

After her Lower East Side co-op refurbished the 1,000-square-foot roof of its 
six-floor walk-up, Paula Crossfield persuaded fellow board members to spend 
$3,000 to put a 400-square-foot garden on it. They built planters and paved 
part of the roof so people can walk easily among the plantings. 

Ms. Crossfield, managing editor of the Civil Eats blog, about sustainable 
agriculture, is paying for the seeds and will do the harvesting, sharing the 
bounty with her neighbors. (She and her husband live on the top floor.) 

In the process, she estimates she carried up 500 of the 1,500 pounds of soil 
they bought and put in planters.

“My decision to start a garden is an extension of my work,” Ms. Crossfield 
said. “Growing my own food helps me understand better what I write about: how 
food gets to our table, the difficulties it entails.” It’s not all about 
agricultural policy, she added.

“The bottom line,” she said, “is that I harbor a secret desire to be a farmer, 
and my way of doing that is to use what I have, which is a roof.”

Two weeks ago Ms. Crossfield transplanted seedlings from her apartment onto the 
roof: golden zucchini, oakleaf lettuce, brussels sprouts, butternut squash, 
watermelon, rainbow chard, cucumbers, nasturtiums, calendula, sunflowers, 
amaranth greens, tomatoes and herbs. 

In San Francisco’s Tenderloin district, Maya Donelson has filled planter boxes 
with vegetables on a 900-square-foot patch of roof at the Glide Memorial 
Church. For the last two years she has managed the Graze the Roof Project at 
the church’s Glide Center, a neighborhood social service provider. 

The food goes to the center’s volunteers and children in the neighborhood who 
work in the garden one day a week and learn to cook what they grow. 

“I’ve never had one kid who hasn’t wanted to get his hands dirty,” said Ms. 
Donelson, who studied architecture and environmental design. “They are willing 
to try anything if they see it growing and pull it out of the ground. We juiced 
the purple carrots and the kids drank that.”

Sustainable South Bronx, a nonprofit environmental organization, said it will 
help Alfred E. Smith High School plant a roof garden and has helped a company 
in Hunts Point put strawberry plants on its roof. (The owner likes 
strawberries, an official of the group said.) 

One of the more ambitious projects is a 6,000-square-foot roof farm in 
Greenpoint, Brooklyn, which will grow food for local restaurants and shops.

Ben Flanner, a transplanted Wisconsinite who’s running it, said he became 
fascinated with organic agriculture and was set to take an internship on a 
rural farm but then had a change of heart. 

“I wanted to farm but I didn’t want to leave the city,” he said. 

Mr. Flanner was lucky to find an environmentally aware company — Broadway 
Stages, a stage and lighting company — that wanted a green roof on one of its 
buildings. It paid to prepare the roof for planting and agreed to let him grow 
food on it. Mr. Flanner and his partner, Annie Novak, did the planting and will 
be able to keep all the profits from their organic vegetables. 

“People are knocking on my door to buy the stuff,” he said. Andrew Tarlow, a 
partner in four nearby restaurants, including Marlow & Sons, has agreed to buy 
anything Mr. Flanner grows. 

The roof cost $6,000 to prepare, according to Lisa Goode, who with her husband, 
Chris, owns Goode Green, a company that designs edible roof gardens. There are 
at least 1,000 seedlings planted in 16 beds, each about 60 feet long.

“A smaller roof would cost more per square foot,” she said. Mr. Flanner’s costs 
for the garden itself were less than $2,000, but Ms. Goode said it will take 
more than one roof for him to make a living.

“This is sort of a pilot to see if it can become a viable business model 
because he isn’t going to make any money from this,” she said. “If we can get 
the owner to do more roofs, he can then make a profit.” 

Not long ago, edible rooftop gardeners were less likely to be thinking about 
sustainable food systems or the environment. 

Lee Utterbach wanted to recapture summers on his grandmother’s farm. But there 
was no land around his house in the Mission district of San Francisco. So when 
he bought the building where he lives and runs a photo equipment rental shop, 
he turned the roof into a vegetable and flower garden. Since the roof slopes, 
all the planting was done along its perimeter. Some of it, like the rosemary, 
is so well established, it hangs over the front of the building. 

Reaching the roof means a trip through the kitchen window, then up an incline. 
A small ladder takes visitors to his wife’s greenhouse and a hot tub, a deck , 
a composting toilet and the future guest room. In one area that his wife, Aly, 
describes as his “man cave,” Mr. Utterbach watches his 17-inch TV screen from a 
comfortable chair.

“I was probably eight or nine years ahead of the curve when I built this,” he 
said. “I just enjoy watering plants and digging in the soil.”

Peter Bergold, a neuroscientist who teaches at SUNY Downstate in Brooklyn, was 
also inspired by the past. Memories of the first asparagus and carrots he ate 
from a garden years before led him to start growing produce on the roof of his 
landmarked brownstone in Park Slope, Brooklyn, six or seven years ago.

“That was my epiphany,” he said of the sweetness he was trying to recapture. “I 
assumed asparagus grew with a rubber band around them.”

Environmental awareness came slowly. “One of the things that got me 
interested,” he said, “was that between global warming and the thermal bubble 
of cities you can start things much earlier so you have a much longer growing 
season.” 

Another benefit gardeners get from planting well above the ground is that they 
face fewer pests. 

But roof gardeners also have to think about winds that can knock over tender 
vines. And while concentrated heat on top of city buildings can help tomatoes 
ripen, it also means more frequent watering, even if irrigation requires 
lugging watering cans up stairs. 

Though rooftop gardens go back at least to the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, the 
modern green roof movement has made its way here from Europe, where for years 
government policies have encouraged or required green roofs. 

The government benefits take into account the fact that gardening on the roof 
requires much more preparation than gardening on terra firma. 

First, it must be determined whether the roof can support the weight of the 
soil, the plants and the water. It may need to be retrofitted. Barring that, 
gardeners can place planters around the perimeter, which is generally its 
strongest part.

The containers can be almost anything: ready-made planters; boxes made of 
reclaimed wood, old milk cartons, children’s wading pools. A screen at the 
bottom holds in a lightweight substance, like packing peanuts for bulk, topped 
with a barrier fabric so the soil can’t go through. Potting soil, mixed with 
ingredients to lighten it, is put on top.

When gardens are planted directly on the roof, a waterproof membrane is laid 
down first, followed by insulation and a root barrier. (A guide to roof 
gardening is available at baylocalize.org.)

All this work can be off-putting for landlords. Five years ago, Ms. Crossfield 
said, the owner of an apartment building on Sixth Avenue in the West Village 
told one of his tenants to get rid of a garden she had planted. 

“He told the woman to take it off the roof,” she said, “because he didn’t see 
any benefit in it.”

That’s not so likely these days.

“Several years ago you might have seen a certain amount of resistance,” said 
Miquela Craytor, executive director of Sustainable South Bronx, “but now people 
are coming to us saying they want one.”




      
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