Abstract

Urban areas are the fastest growing land type worldwide. By 2060, it is expected that approximately 70% of the human population will live in cities. With increased urban population growth, food sovereignty and security issues have gained more attention, resulting in a drastic increase in urban food production activities including, urban farming and gardening. The extent to which urban farms function, their social, ecological and economic composition, and their overall impact on local food security has become an often overlooked, but important topic. From 2014 to 2017, we partnered with 29 urban farms in the San Francisco Bay Area for a broad-scale survey of urban farm characteristics. Findings reported in this research focused on local (on-farm) characteristics, including management practices, on-farm spatial composition, and estimated productivity. We implemented open-ended surveys for farm managers to better understand management practices, measured on-farm elements, including yields, crop biodiversity, weed composition and abundance, and measured spatial characteristics such as area of production, non-crop area, and proportion of infrastructure to better understand how urban farms were spatially configured. We found trends regarding spatial composition, including a large proportion of farm area dedicated to infrastructure and underutilized potential production space. All farms surveyed had adopted a breadth of agroecological management practices, including cover cropping, crop rotations, intercropping, and a range of soil conservation practices. Measured farms are incredibly productive, with estimated seasonal yields of 7.14 kg/square meter. Estimated yields were comparable with actual yields as measured at two participating farms.

Highlights

  • Urban agriculture (UA) sites, identified as urban farms, are co-created by the immeasurable factors that occur in the built environment

  • We investigate the preliminary aspects of these future research questions, seek to determine the overall spatial composition of urban farm land use, and investigate whether specific trends regarding land-use types exist in our participating farms

  • We found that urban farms are diverse in spatial composition, have adopted a broad spectrum of agroecological management practices, are highly productive and directly impact local food security

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Summary

Introduction

Urban agriculture (UA) sites, identified as urban farms, are co-created by the immeasurable factors that occur in the built environment. Do ecological factors, such as soils, and climate impact their function, but social and economic processes shape their location, size and even what they produce [1,2]. These farms occur in vacant lots, schools, city parks and other underused urban spaces; and span a variety of typologies, including institutional urban farms, small allotment style gardens, collectively managed spaces and many distinct combinations in between [3,4]. Despite UA’s prevalence in the modern urban landscape, little is known about on-farm composition, management and function; or whether trends exist across these different categories. Our research goal was to better describe urban agriculture’s local composition and practices by investigating the on-farm characteristics of urban farms, including landscape composition, prevalence of management practices and a variety of production measures, including estimated yields, biodiversity and disposition of harvests

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