From Wikiversity - Reading time: 4 min
Project Eden is an edible landscaping initiative at Loyola University Chicago, to increase the campuses current edibility
As modern urbanites our knowledge of agriculture and food production may be limited to what we see in the grocery store. In spite of our higher educations and our lucrative careers, we often fail to realize how our fundamental survival is inherently dependent on the experience and quality of our agriculture. However food production has been removed from the majority of the population, leaving little opportunity to learn let alone develop any intimacy with our food. These problems of distance and ignorance are recurring themes in the faults of the modern food system. Food is grown in one location than shipped a great distance to the rest of society, locking in a spiritual, physical and mental distance from our food. This distance is inadvertently causing us to make blind choices about our food in daily life, resulting in negative downstream effects in fields such as nutrition, mental health, food security etc. In looking to provide opportunity and again immerse people to again interact with their food production, contemporary urban agriculture resources will have to be established.
Imagine a campus where fruit trees line the sidewalks, grape vines scale vertical walls, and annual vegetables fill landscaping garden beds. The Garden of Eden? No, it’s Loyola University’s Lake Shore Campus in downtown Chicago, where students, faculty ,and community members come together to assume responsibility for stewardship and maintenance of this edible landscape. The university encourages this contemporary urban agriculture through curricula and community-wide events. Individuals commune with each other and their environment through food and work.
Map
Link to map
Soil
Soil were sent out for analysis from four locations across campus: Winthrop and Loyola ave, Halas Field, Cudahy Science, and Mundelein Center.
No hazardous materials were found in soil test results, however soil conditions on the lakeshore campus were found to be strongly alkaline
Responsible Stewardship
Documents in the Cloud
section, in effort to share and further urban agriculture from an individual level to an institutional level.
Events and scholastic workdays were created to promote and engage the student body in activities of the project. Three main events were created:
New Plant Installations
Unlike the other edible landscaping initiatives on occasion the planting of edible plants has occurred around campus. Some locations with edible plants planted by these dareing students include:
The goal of this project has been working to create the essential resources to enable urban agriculture to take place at a university level. Urban agriculture is a commitment to education; an education that is progressive, holistic, interdisciplinary and encourages participation at all levels. In doing so people can then organically experience the intimacy of food production as a component of their daily lives. However in a place like a university the time a student spends at the university for their career is around 4 years. Institutionalization of an urban agriculture program as component of the university experience will enable students (and community ) to reap the benefits of a true agri-culture.
| School Year | Team Lead (s) | Mentor(s) |
|---|---|---|
| 2009-2010 | Elias Majid | Adam Schubel |
| 2010-2011 | Elias Majid | Adam Schubel |
| 2011-2012 | Rose Brickley | Adam Schubel |
| TBA | TBA | TBA |
| TBA | TBA | TBA |
Growers' Guild Loyola, the campus gardening club, have been much of the backbone in working to introduce edible plants to the Loyola University Chicago campus. The club has organized events, workshops and landscape tours to promote the campus edible landscape.
Center for Urban Environmental Research Policy (CUERP) has been the promotional administrative force encouraging the institutionalization of Project Eden. Instructor Adam Schubel of CUERP has built the project as a part of the course STEP:Food Systems, offered at Loyola University Chicago