Abstract

In recent years, there has been a resurgence in the popularity of allotments and home- grown food in the UK. This interest is likely to increase as people become more aware of the health benefits of spending time outdoors. Climate projections for the UK indicate that over the next 20 years, winters will become warmer and wetter, and the summers hotter and drier. Most UK allotments and community gardens are a collection of individual plots whose holders are free to manage them as they wish, within site rules. The efficacy of individual efforts to collect and store rainwater is often limited as most allotment sites were laid out when water practices were a secondary consideration. Our research, which included visiting allotment sites and reviewing growing practices, suggests that grouping plots and sharing water facilities could enable plot holders to store sufficient water to meet anticipated demand for thirty rain-free days in midsummer. This combined with growing practices that improve soil moisture capacity and water use efficiency will provide effective mitigation against climate change.

Highlights

  • Allotment gardening has a long history in the UK and has gone in and out of popularity over the last 250 years

  • We reviewed the websites of UK Allotment Groups and Community Gardens, together with digital stories collected by the Drought Risk and You (DRY) project

  • How allotment plots and an allotment site might be organized if water use is taken as the starting point

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Summary

Introduction

Allotment gardening has a long history in the UK and has gone in and out of popularity over the last 250 years. Local authorities could provide new allotment sites through the use of Section 106 planning obligations [21], so that each new housing development had a community garden or growing area included. We realized that organizing allotment plots and sites to be more water efficient provided an opportunity to address other important questions such as accessibility, indirect discrimination, sustainability and promotion of a sense of place and mental wellbeing. These have been combined into a design for an allotment of the future

Methods
Methodology
Prototyping
Improving Efficiency of Water Use
Plant Density
Mulching
Weed Control
Directed Watering
Watering
Response
Avoid Water Shortages
Grow Drought Tolerant Plants
How Much Water Is Needed on an Allotment?
Rainwater Storage and Collection
How Much Water Can Be Collected?
What Is the Optimum Structure for Rainwater Collection and Storage?
Evaluation of three possible roof
Cultivation and within Plot Layout
Paths and Beds
Pond and Wildlife Area
Different Sized Plots
Communal Building
Toilet
Communal
Conclusions
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