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This Belgium start-up allows anyone to become an urban farmer

Rooftop agriculture: Peas&Love’s first Brussels urban farm.
Image: Peas&Love

The company’s “Peas for all” programme makes 5% of the space on its farms available to educational projects and local associations to help more people reconnect to nature.

By Douglas Broom
We Forum
Dec 14, 2020

Excerpt:

Scheepers started Peas&Love after using vertical growing techniques to overcome his earlier gardening setbacks. It now has three urban farms in Brussels and five in Paris where anyone can rent an allotment for about $40 a month.

All of the farming work is taken care of by the company, and members are alerted by an app when it’s time to harvest the produce. Each 4m square vegetable garden is divided into two halves: one for the sole use of the subscriber and the other to grow crops that will be shared by all members.

“The motivation of the people who are part of the concept is mainly to renew contact with nature but they don’t have the time or the knowledge,” Scheepers says. “You come every week to harvest your own allotment but you don’t have to do the work to get it.”

It’s all about creating a community of people who help each other and share values as well as food, he says. It’s a “new approach in urban farming” which has 200 active urban farmers at its first location in Woluwe-Saint-Lambert, in Brussels.

Read the complete article here.