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The
School of the Future Roof Garden Project began
in 1998. With the exception of Central Park, green
space and access to nature is somewhat limited
in New York City. The project sprang to life after
a few students expressed a desire to bring a slice
of nature to their metropolitan school. Soon thereafter,
the 9th grade Integrated Science class made a
decision and commitment to transform their empty
school roof into a rooftop garden.
During
the first year, students drew designs and formulated
a master plan for the garden. They grew plants
in class and studied their life cycles in detail.
The Garden Club also built a scale model of their
future rooftop garden. They visited the roof on
a regular basis in order to document the changing
light patterns. They even had the foresight to
have a weight limit assessment conducted to insure
that their garden would not compromise the architectural
integrity of the school building.
Students
were engaged in every aspect of the garden. They
participated in grant writing, model creation,
plant maintenance and propagation, actively sought
donations and gained ownership by working in the
garden. In fact, garden work was even incorporated
into the After School Program. Garden Club members
also volunteered their personal time on the weekends.
To learn the finer details about garden design
and maintenance, several of the students attended
weekend classes provided by the Bronx Botanical
Gardens.
Today,
the roof blooms with arborvitae, Douglas fir,
holly, rosebushes, and hemlock. The Garden Club
created an "Ecology Mural" complete
with a display case describing the ecology of
the garden. During the summer, the plants continue
to flourish because they thoughtfully installed
a drip irrigation system. They have also built
special decking and incline ramps in order to
provide access to guests in wheelchairs. The students
are currently building a greenhouse to help propagate
plants that will attract native birds to their
garden.
They
will also be establishing a weather station and
contributing data to the GLOBE program, which
will be made available on the Worldwide Web. Eventually,
the students would like to create a School of
the Future "Rooftop Environmental Education
Center" right in the middle of New York City.
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