
The Paris Expo Porte de Versailles is cultivating an alternative solution to industrial agriculture on its rooftop: a 14,000-square-meter garden overlooking the Eiffel Tower. The garden, Nature Urbaine, situated on the roof of Pavilion 6 was installed at the end of June by Agripolis and Cultures en Ville, and when fully operational will be the largest of its kind in all of Europe. Tomatoes, strawberries and aromatic plants are already growing in the sizable garden, which is equivalent to two football pitches. The first fruits are currently being distributed to restaurants and hotels in the area, located in the southwest of the French capital.
Urban agriculture is not a recent phenomenon, between the two world wars, as Nature Urbaine recalls, the Louvre courtyard was planted with leeks and even chickens were raised on the city’s stately Haussmannian balconies. There are currently about 30 urban gardens across the French capital, but the Paris Urban Planning Agency (APUR) estimates that there are 320 potentially vegetable-yielding hectares that could produce 32,000 tonnes of vegetables a year, enough to feed 230,000 Parisians.
The garden in the Parisian pavilion currently has six workers, but they hope to increase the team to twenty. The garden is also useful for the neighbors, who for 320 euros a year can rent a one-square meter plot to grow their own food. “We are trying to propose something different”, summarizes Hardy, who hopes to replicate this garden model in other cities and help bring some nature back to the city.
Photos and text: EFE
