Foodscapes introduces urban food gardens on the Fayetteville Public Library campus in the downtown core. Planning scenarios outline three levels of investment ranging from minimum to modest and ambitious development, depending on the extent of food production activity. Activities, including growing, processing, production, distribution, waste recovery, and community education, are curated in unique urban formats offering signature visitor experiences that will extend Fayetteville’s new Cultural Arts Corridor.
Foodscapes features a permaculture pattern language replicating the organic growing patterns and ecosystem structure found in nature. Growing will be curated across novel urban micro-environments that promote discovery. They include small-plot organic teaching gardens, a temperate food forest, terraced orchards for foraging, a four-season greenhouse with a climate battery, and vernacular growing technologies in espaliers and thermal wall gardens using “fruit walls”. A food hub for use by residents in value-added food processing doubles as an event space, a seed bank, and a “third place” for informal gathering. Foodscapes promotes food literacy and security, enriching the Fayetteville Public Library’s service as a cherished social infrastructure.
Awards
2024 AN Best of Design Awards Honorable Mention: Unbuilt-Cultural and Civic
2024 American Architecture Award
2024 The Plan Awards: Culture Future Finalist
2024 The Plan Awards: Production Future Finalist
2024 Green GOOD DESIGN Award
2024 Block, Street & Building Design Competition: Winner
2024 Architizer A+ Awards: Unbuilt Institutional Finalist
2023 London International Creative Competition Official Selection—Architecture
Sponsor
U.S. Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service
Client
Fayetteville Public Library