On the QT | The Official Newsletter of GWA June - July 2017 | Page 16

GWA Foundation Hits the Road with Gro1000 Events BY ALEXA HALLER More than 50 Santa Monica youth and volunteers worked with representatives of GWAF, KidsGardening.org and Franklin Park Conservatory to learn about gardening and other green activities. Gro1000 GWAF, the United States Conference of Mayors and Franklin Park Conservatory are partners with Scotts Miracle-Gro in support of Gro1000. Starting in 2011 and through the company’s 150th anniversary in 2018, it is supporting the creation of more than 1,000 community gardens and green spaces in the markets we serve. The partnership helps neighborhoods in need of green spaces, schools in need of places to play and communities in need of beautification and revitalization. 16 GWAF and Grow1000 aided in development of Abolition Row Park in Bedford, Massachusetts, May 12. The greenspace is being designed to revitalize vacant property. The park will focus on local history, as well as using greenspace as an outdoor classroom. The area will aid in the creation of the Monarch Butterfly Pollination Highway within the park. Representatives of GWAF traveled to Santa Monica, California, April 24, for the first of four Gro1000 trips. The site was Ishihara Park and the Gro1000 project transformed land formerly used as a parking lot into a welcoming com- munity greenspace with native plantings, an urban orchard, a learning garden and passive green areas for residents to gather, exercise and experience nature in an urban setting. Fresh produce grown in the learning garden will be donated to local food services. On May 12, foundation representatives went to New Bedford, Massachusetts, to work in Abolition Row Park, a community greenspace designed to revitalize vacant property. The property faces the Nathan and Mary John- son House and the Friends Meeting House, both properties on the National Register of Historic Places. This park will focus on all the local history, as well as using greenspace as an outdoor classroom. The area will aid in the creation of the Monarch Butterfly Pollination Highway within the park. GWAF went to Rochester Hills, Michigan, May 18, in support of the installation of a sensory garden in Riverbend Park. The 5,000 square-foot garden will have two areas – a student-designed and maintained space, and a professionally designed sensory garden. The garden will include areas specifically devoted to local schools, providing students the oppor- tunity to learn the elements of ecology such as native plants, soil erosion and pollination. The natural elements playground immediately adjacent to the garden will be designed with sensitivity to children with special needs. On June 10, officials gathered at Cherry Ann Park in New Haven, Connecticut, to celebrate the park, participate in a community planting and other activities.