Addressing Food Deserts Through Re-localized Agriculture: Four Design Typologies with Community Engagement for Urban Food System Expansion on Available Municipal Land

In Commons Pub Date : 1900-01-01 DOI:10.35483/acsa.am.111.47
C. Crosson
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Abstract

Tucson, Arizona has been a historic passageway and home to a rich overlay of settlement patterns for over 4,000 years. Currently, 13.6% of current Tucson residents live in food deserts, areas that are low-income and have restricted access to healthy and affordable foods. Despite its agricultural history, recent efforts to relocalize urban food production to meet these local nutritional needs face stern criticism that the city is already water-stressed and cannot afford the irrigation required for food growth. This project investigated the capacity for Tucson to expand its urban food system to meet food desert nutritional demands using only sustainable water supplies on vacant municipal land. Four typologies on identified land owned by community partners were tested through design inquiry and corresponding water and food production calculations. The paper concludes that if these design typologies were implemented across the 711 acres of available municipal land in current food desert areas, over 100% of the nutritional needs of these food desert areas would be met (Tong et al. 2020).
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通过重新定位农业解决食物沙漠:在可用市政土地上城市食物系统扩展的四种设计类型和社区参与
亚利桑那州的图森市是一条具有历史意义的通道,也是4000多年来丰富的聚落模式的家园。目前,图森市13.6%的居民生活在“食物沙漠”地区,即低收入地区,很难获得健康和负担得起的食物。尽管有着悠久的农业历史,但最近为满足当地营养需求而将城市粮食生产重新定位的努力面临着严厉的批评,即城市已经缺水,无法承担粮食增长所需的灌溉费用。该项目调查了图森扩大其城市食品系统的能力,以满足食物沙漠的营养需求,仅使用空置市政土地上的可持续供水。通过设计调查和相应的水和粮食生产计算,在社区合作伙伴拥有的确定土地上测试了四种类型。本文的结论是,如果在当前食物沙漠地区的711英亩可用市政土地上实施这些设计类型,这些食物沙漠地区超过100%的营养需求将得到满足(Tong et al. 2020)。
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