community garden

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We are very excited to begin a new project for the Sunset Hill neighborhood to transform an abandoned City Light substation parcel into a pocket park.  Based on the input from the community thus far, the program is very intriguing:  a community space with an artist-in-residence caretaker, powered by a serious photovoltaic array.

There may be more or different elements as the project evolves in the community design process, and as we navigate through various City agencies and funding sources, but fundamentally this has all the values we expound as a firm:  sustainable building, energized public space, housing options/density, and  an interactive process that invests people in the civic life of their neighborhood.

In 2008, I designed a structure with a similar program for a Dwell Magazine conceptual competition:

Crissy Field House

Crissy Field House

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p-patch-book-cover

We are very excited to see this survey of Seattle’s urban community gardens, especially since the Interbay P-Patch is included as one of the case studies.  The P-Patch is one of my personal favorites because of the impact it has had in strengthening this vital community, and has been instrumental in showing other neighborhoods how to implement their own community garden.

Further, the P-Patch really showed us just how satisfying working on these small pro bono projects can be. Since the P-Patch, we’ll donated about 5% of our yearly output to pro bono causes, including daycares, parks, and community centers and hope that we’ll have more opportunities to help concerned citizen groups visualize and build a better city.

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IMG_3789-webCAST has been involved in a number of  pro bono projects over the years, such as parks, community gardenscommunity centersart installations, and smart development, and one of those, the Interbay P-Patch, is being published in an upcoming book on pro bono design by Public Architecture.

This project was originally headed up by Nathan Walker, and after he left town, we’ve continued our involvement, adding a kiosk, arbor and most recently cool signage at the street.

We’re really excited about the P-Patch, one, because it is a project that is near and dear to our hearts, and two, it can inspire more firms to offer their expertise to help civic and community causes, and more citizen groups to see that if they can dream it, they can build it.

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