Marlboro College

Victory Garden and Community Greenhouse

Marlboro College Victory Garden and Community Greenhouse 

PHOTOS COURTESY OF MARLBORO COLLEGE

The victory garden and Community Greenhouse at Vermont’s Marlboro College were born of student initiative. The projects — idiosyncratic of the self-governing community and student-led academic program — were created bottom-up. The garden and greenhouse are spaces of experimentation to relearn essential human skills — i.e. how to grow food. The students built knowledge by building community, while decreasing dependency on industrial agriculture.

The projects are in a state of continual evolution. Every year a new Farm Committee takes over the space and learns how to use the site while managing the new group and developing new projects. The farm hosts both community and academic projects. Over the years, students have grown hops to use in local craft beer, built a bread oven, installed a fire ring and, most dramatically, created a permanent, 700-square-foot, solar-heated greenhouse.

Curricular benefits are also reaped from outdoor learning at the site. Professor Todd Smith’s chemistry classes grow sunflowers at the farm. Seeds are then harvested and pressed for oil, which is then used in experiments to generate biofuels. Biology professor Jennifer Ramstetter teaches an agroecology course at the farm in which students are planting native edible plants: blueberries and nut trees, for starters. Writing professor Kyhl Lyndgaard even used the compost pile for a site-specific, group reading place to examine Maxine Kumin’s poem “The Brown Mountain.”

The space lives on and adapts to the current needs and interests of the community. Students are developing a longterm plan for sustainable growing. A new student-faculty-staff collaborative class is building microcomputers to measure the greenhouse’s efficiency for a datadriven design to create the most efficient interior growing space. New challenges create new opportunities for knowledge experimentation.

This article originally appeared in the issue of .

Featured

  • Hawaii Elementary School Breaks Ground on New Classroom Building

    Kealakehe Elementary School in Kailua, Hawaii, recently began construction on a new, $16-million classroom building for its campus, according to a news release. The 13,000-square-foot building will stand two stories and connect the existing upper and lower campuses.

  • UT System Board of Regents Approves $108M Housing Complex

    The University of Texas System Board of Regents recently announced the approval of a new, $108-million housing complex at the University of Texas at El Paso (UTEP), according to a news release. The facility will stand four stories and have a total of 456 new beds for freshmen students.

  • Texas State University Completes Stadium Renovations

    Texas State University in San Marcos, Texas, recently announced that it has completed a series of additions and renovations to its football stadium, according to a news release. Formerly known as the Bobcat Stadium End Zone Complex, the Johnny and Nathali Weisman Football Performance Center is an 85,000-square-foot expansion featuring hospitality spaces, banquet spaces, exterior concourses, and upgrades to the field house.

  • iPark 87

    Building a Future-Focused Career and Technical Education Center

    A district superintendent shares his team's journey to aligning student passions with workforce demands, and why their new CTE center could be a model for districts nationwide.

Digital Edition