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Nonprofit turns open Denver Police station land into urban garden

The organization donates food to households in need, as well as to food banks and shelters.

By Julia Cardi
Denver Gazette
Aug 4, 2023

Excerpt:

Under the hot August sun on Thursday afternoon, in a formerly empty tract of land outside outside the Denver police’s District 4 station, a group of volunteers raked through soil and took wheelbarrows full of wood chips back and forth across the space. They were preparing the site to burst with flowers and produce next year.

The nonprofit Table Urban Farm is spearheading the site’s conversion into an urban garden. The organization has a network of gardens in southern Denver to grow food for the community. Co-director Jeanine Kopaska Broek said she had been looking for another garden site, and she noticed the station had an empty plot of land sitting out front.

“I deliver food to a food bank close by, and I have another plot close by, and I go to this King Soopers (nearby),” she said. “I just noticed this and finally decided to ask.”

The garden site sits on South Clay Street at West Warren Avenue in southwest Denver, across the street from a busy bus stop on the Route 35 line.

District 4 Cmdr. Brad Qualley said he believes the visibility of the garden is beneficial to the police’s efforts to build relationships with the community because it’s a natural conversation-starter, especially as people have seen the land transition from open space to a hub of activity. He added current and retired police officers have shown interest in helping with the garden.

Read the complete article here.