Landscape Journal - Autumn 2020: Greener Recovery

Page 65

LI life: food security By Rhys Jones

The Humanitarian Landscape Collective 1. Reviving the growing boxes with new seedlings at the Brixton Youth Centre. © Jojo Sureh, Cook to Care

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n 26th March, architectural critic, designer and educator Michael Sorkin died from COVID-19. In addition to his design work and writing, one of his most famous pieces of work is “250 Things Every Architect Should Know”, a meditative list of historical, environmental, social, material and political factors we should be aware of when creating places for people. Michael lost his life to a virus that is still rampaging around the globe and in the time since its outbreak (combined with the Black Lives Matter movement) we have had a harsh light shone through the cracks in our society, and realised what we as landscape architects should know, but don’t. Here’s a few of them: – How someone can feed their family without going to the supermarket – Why there are so few black landscape architects – Who really has access to high quality green space – Who really considers it a “high quality” green space The Humanitarian Landscape Collective are looking for answers to some of these and, in response to the food crisis brought on by COVID, we have taken a close look at food security and how it can be improved at the community level. We started by leading a social media campaign, called Food Share Initiative, to use Clap for Carers as an opportunity to rally up food bank donations amongst neighbours. It was a knee-jerk reaction to the surge in demand for food banks and saw an outpouring of participants

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(and photos of baked beans) from across the country. However, this was by no means a long-term solution, much as food banks generally should not be seen as a long-term solution to food poverty. Instead the answer lies in eradicating poverty and building food resilience at the community level. We’ve started to investigate the latter by partnering up with Cook to Care: a food aid organisation run by Jojo Sureh, which cooks and delivers food to vulnerable people in South London. As she is based in the kitchen of a youth centre in Brixton, we’re taking the opportunity to run a co-creation and food growing project with the young people, using the neglected garden and raised planters. We want to know what food and landscape means to them, and in return we’ll share our skills and knowledge to empower them to improve the garden and forge a closer

connection with food. The idea is to weave our project in with the Centre’s own mentorship programme and offer employability skills to the youth, some of whom were gang-affiliated and grew up in some of the most dangerous neighbourhoods in the country. We’ll be sharing lessons from this project and exploring the subject with a workshop later in the year. We’re looking into one of the many things that the profession doesn’t know, and COVID is a bleak reminder of how much they matter. With the impacts of climate change, these crises will be happening a lot more often, so it’s time that we start looking for the answers to them. Rhys Jones is a co-founder of the Humanitarian Landscape Collective and a Consultant Landscape Architect at LUC

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Articles inside

LI Campus and upcoming webinars

13min
pages 69-71

Watch our most recent CPD Day and view the Jellicoe Lecture

2min
page 68

Back to School - a policy update from the LI

6min
pages 66-67

The Humanitarian Landscape Collective

2min
page 65

Excluded communities and greenspace

3min
page 64

A Lambeth walk honouring Mary Seacole

3min
page 63

Planting decisions for mitigation and adaptation

5min
pages 60-61

Landscape, justice and green recovery

2min
page 3

Towards a new suburbia

7min
pages 57-59

Staying in the city

7min
pages 53-56

New life in public squares in the age of COVID-19

11min
pages 48-52

Nature of the city

7min
pages 43-47

Post-COVID-19: a bio urban future

7min
pages 38-41

Great Ancoats Street – proposals for a new park

5min
pages 35-37

Heron Street – a model for green capsule street space

4min
pages 32-34

Creating healthy green spaces

5min
pages 30-31

Consultation and engagement in a fast-changing landscape

8min
pages 26-28

Equity and landscape

6min
pages 23-25

Cycle revolution

7min
pages 19-22

The benefits of tree cover

6min
pages 16-18

How green is our recovery?

5min
pages 13-15

Watch this space

19min
pages 6-12
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