Design Observer

Archive
Books + Store
Job Board
Comments
About
Contact



Change Observer

Resources
Submissions
About
Contact


Departments

Audio
Case Studies
Collections
Dialogues
Essays
Gallery
Interviews
Miscellaneous
Opinions
Primary Sources
Program-Aspen
Program-Bellagio
Projects
Report
Reviews
Video


Topics

Advertising
Aid
Architecture
Art
Books
Branding
Business
Cities / Places
Community
Culture
Design History
Design Practice
Development
Disaster Relief
Ecology
Economy
Education
Energy
Environment
Fashion
Film / Video
Food/Agriculture
Geography
Global / Local
Graphic Design
Health / Safety
Ideas
Illustration
Info Design
Infrastructure
Interaction Design
Journalism
Landscape
Media
Motion Design
Museums
Nature
Obituary
Philanthropy
Photography
Planning
Politics / Policy
Popular Culture
Poverty
Preservation
Product Design
Public Art
Science
Shelter
Social Enterprise
Sports
Sustainability
Technology
Theory/Criticism
Transportation
Typography
Urbanism
Water


Comments (2) Posted 12.14.09 | PERMALINK | PRINT

Project

St. Augustine School Chicken Project


If this South Bronx institution can run a sustainability program, "anyone can."

By Jane Margolies

Children tend chickens as part of an urban school curriculum. Photo from St. Augustine School website.

Thanksgiving poems written by second-graders are tacked up outside the principal’s office the day I visit the St. Augustine School in the South Bronx:

      Mr. Turkey…
      Nice and fat.
      I’m going to eat you
      Just like that!

In fact, the 200 students at this parochial school know more than many city kids do about where the food on their plates comes from. Behind the four-story brick 1905 school building is St. Augustine’s own chicken coop, where 15 hens with black feathers and speckled breasts lay large brown eggs. In the community garden across the street, students this year grew beets, cucumbers, tomatoes and broccoli. If all goes as planned, by June tilapia will be swimming under a blanket of hydroponic herbs in a tank in a new greenhouse. And, yes, even live turkeys are a possibility for the future.

It’s all part of the sustainability program at this PreK–8 school in the Morrisania section of the Bronx. Across the country, educational institutions are integrating environmental awareness into their curriculums and daily practices, according to the Cloud Institute for Sustainability Education, a nonprofit consultancy based in New York. What makes St. Augustine’s experiment in urban agriculture stand out is where it’s taking place — in an impoverished, highly urban area — and how closely it is entwined with the surrounding community.

The South Bronx, of course, was the poster child of urban blight in the late 20th century. Even today Morrisania, which is in the southwest part of the Bronx, lies in the poorest congressional district in the United States. The population is largely black and Hispanic. Every Monday, a line snakes from the food pantry at the St. Augustine Roman Catholic church, a magnificent Romanesque-style limestone edifice on a rise on East 167th Street, which was built in 1895 when the area was largely inhabited by Irish and German immigrants (after structural problems forced the diocese to close the building to the public this year, services were moved to the St. Augustine School auditorium). All of the school’s students receive free federal lunch; 87 percent live at or below the poverty level. “If we can do it,” says Michael Brady, the school’s director of development, referring to St. Augustine’s sustainability efforts, “anyone can.”

Over the last couple of years, the school has been making its day-to-day operations greener: It switched to compostable cafeteria trays made of sugar cane. Back-to-back copying is standard on a machine that uses a toner so green that “we were told we could drink it if we had to,” Brady jokes. Floor cleaner and liquid hand soap come from Snappy Solutions, a janitorial supply company that specializes in earth-friendly products.

But getting students to buy into the idea of being responsible stewards of the environment is crucial to “making sustainability sustainable,” says Brady, who is also the managing partner in a governmental relations and development firm based in Albany. And that is how last year the hens arrived on the scene.

The chicken project was sponsored by Heifer International, which funds agricultural ventures in poor areas around the world, and Just Food, a New York City nonprofit whose City Farms program works with community gardeners to increase food grown in the Big Apple, particularly in low-income areas where healthy food is scarce. Owen Taylor, the City Farms Training and Livestock Coordinator, came to the school and helped current and former students, staff and community members build a coop and pen out of timber and chicken wire in the Peace Garden behind the school. Awesome Farm, a small pasture-raised livestock operation in Tivoli, New York, an hour and a half north of the city, delivered the 15 black sex-linked hens (no roosters, which are classified as wild animals in the "large and predatory bird" category and are prohibited by New York City law).

Thirteen-year-old Mamy (pronounced “Mommy”), dressed in her school uniform of a navy sweater vest and plaid kilt, introduces me to her charges. The 7th-grader, whose family emigrated from Senegal three years ago, heads the school’s Chicken Club, responsible for giving the hens water and food and gathering eggs (1 to 15 daily, most of them distributed to students and to the church food pantry). By now Mamy knows their preferences (“they don’t like bananas or bread”) and their personalities — one of them “doesn’t like to share,” another “is always getting picked on.” The hens gorged themselves on the half-eaten cheeseburgers, chicken nuggets and other cafeteria leftovers that previously had been bagged up with the garbage until they put on too much weight, which hampered egg production; now their meals have been pared back to lettuce, apples and organic layer pellets purchased from New York’s only feed store, conveniently located six blocks from the school. “They’re on a diet,” Mamy says with a grimace.

In keeping with the “Passing on the Gift” objectives of the Heifer funding, the students share their husbandry knowledge with others. They regularly welcome visits from community gardeners who want to get into chickens. A workshop was recently held in the school cafeteria where participants learned how to build a “chicken tractor,” a collapsible coop that can be moved around a garden so that the chickens can aerate the soil (i.e., scratch it), eat weeds and insects and fertilize plots.

Students in the school’s Gardening Club had two raised beds of their own in the Genesis Park Community Garden, which was created in 1984 on the site of a burned-down house. The flagstones for the garden steps and walkway were dragged here from nearby abandoned houses that had been destroyed, according to Roger Repohl, who lives in the church rectory, next to the garden, and is the resident beekeeper. He maintains three colonies at the rear of the garden that this past season produced 100 pounds of honey. Some of the produce from the students’ efforts went home with the children, and some went to the food pantry and to religious orders whose budgets have shrunk. Lettuce was given to the chickens (whose manure fertilized the beds).

The modest output of the garden, of course, is just part of the yield. According to Leah Mayor, the director of research and education at the Cloud Institute, the “connectedness” that students feel from working in the garden and with the chickens is key to building a sense of responsibility for the world. “For most of us,” she says, “a sense of place — a love of place — starts with home and school and then branches out. St. Augustine is creating a place kids can love. It’s all about digging where you stand — in this case, literally.”


Comments (2)   |   JUMP TO MOST RECENT COMMENT >>

I think that the 7th-grader, whose family emigrated from Senegal three years ago is really really a good person.

This is indeed all about digging where you stand! thanks for the post very interesting.

ab circle pro review
12.17.09 at 01:58

Dear brother and sisters,
We are christian group that we are willing to care for chickens .we are requesting that you affilliate wioth us to support us with the knoledge of chickens and other supports .thanks and be blessed.
yours
Pastor:Pius mboti
pius mboti oendo
03.01.10 at 03:49


Design Observer encourages comments to be short and to the point; as a general rule, they should not run longer than the original post. Comments should show a courteous regard for the presence of other voices in the discussion. We reserve the right to edit or delete comments that do not adhere to this standard.
Read Complete Comments Policy >>


Name             

Email address 




Please type the text shown in the graphic.


|
Share This Story

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jane Margolies, a writer and editor based in New York, reports on design, travel, books and trends for magazines and The New York Times.
More Bio >>

ADS VIA THE DECK


DESIGN OBSERVER JOBS




MORE BY Jane Margolies

04.19.10: The Laugh Bug
01.14.10: Rising Currents
09.28.09: Skin
09.09.09: Pig 05049
More by Jane Margolies >>

RELATED POSTS


The World as Our Studio
Report on Worldstudio's hybrid business model for collaborating with for-profit and not-for-profit clients (while supporting a foundation).

Teaching in a Time of Uncertainty
Meditation on the doubt creeping into today's design practice.

"But Teacher! That’s Not Design!"
Interview with Portuguese communication designer Barbara Alves about teaching in Mozambique.

Teach For All
Report on Teach For All, an $8.6 million program to expand educational opportunities throughout the world created by Wendy Kopp, founder of Teach For America, and Brett Wigdortz, founder of Teach First in the U.K.

Loose Canon
Review of "Why Design Now?" Cooper-Hewitt National Design Triennial, New York. Through January 9, 2011.

Dori Gíslason
Interview with design educator Halldór Gíslason about his work in Mozambique.

Design for Change Contest
Kiran Bir Sethi is a designer, teacher, principal, advocate and social entrepreneur. Now her “Design for Change Contest,” a recent initiative that swept India in 2009, is expanding globally.

Austin Center for Design
Interactive designer Jon Kolko launches a school to help designers build economically viable careers working for social betterment.

Es Tiempo
Report on Es Tiempo, a campaign designed to encourage Hispanic women in Southern California to seek annual screenings for cervical cancer.

Sweating the Small Stuff
Review of TED 2010 conference, "What the World Needs Now," Long Beach, California, February 9–13.

Bigshot Camera
Report on a camera that children assemble to learn about science and engineering principles.

Chicago Welcomes You
On designing a resettlement process for Burmese immigrants in Chicago.

Aspen Design Summit Report: UNICEF and Early Childhood Development
At the Aspen Design Summit November 11–14, 2009, sponsored by AIGA and Winterhouse Institute, the UNICEF Early Childhood Development Project proposed a new approach to emergency kits that would be more precisely tuned to young children’s intellectual and emotional needs, as well as outlined a basis for the next AIGA/INDEX: Aspen Design Challenge.

Aspen Design Summit: Initial Report
Initial report on the 2009 Aspen Design Summit, sponsored by AIGA and Winterhouse Institute.

DESIS
Report on the Design for Social Innovation and Sustainability project's latest home at New York's New School.

Kick4Life
AIDS education mixes with soccer in plans for a new Lesotho stadium.

Pizza Farm
Report on Project M at Winterhouse's Pizza Farm event in rural Connecticut in August 2009.

Emergence
Emergence, a new massively multiplayer online game (MMOG) fosters diplomatic skills.

Please Turn on Your Cell Phone
In response to the New York City Department of Education's ban on cell phones in schools, an educator argues for their continued use — as mini computers that help students learn.

Question Box
The Question Box project puts the developing-world poor just a phone call away from an internet search.