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About community gardens
COMMUNITY GARDENING - the benefits
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Community gardens can educate the public in organic waste conversion (photo: Compost production at Collingwood Children's Farm, Melbourne)
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Community gardening brings benefits to individuals, neighbourhoods, communities and the cities they are part of.
Individual benefits
Health
Community gardening is an active pursuit yielding fresh food. The benefits include:
- by growing some of their own food, individuals and families have access to fresh, nutritious food and the mixed meals that support nutritional health
- because it involves physical activity, community gardening promotes physical fitness and health.
Learning
- learning to grow plants is mentally stimulating and adds to an individual's knowledge and expertise
- because organic gardening is a knowledge-based system of gardening rather than one based on quick fixes, it encourages learning in the community gardens in which it is used
- community gardens are used by community education, TAFE, schools and universities as learning venues
- gardens are used for community education such as waste minimisation and the recycling of wastes through composting and mulching.
Social benefits
- community gardening is a social activity involving shared decision making, problem solving and negotiation, increasing these skills among gardeners
- as places where people come together with a common purpose, community gardens are places where people get to meet others
- as social venues, community gardens can be used to build a sense of community and belonging; community workers already use the gardens for these purposes.

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Community gardens encourage learning. Katoomba community gardeners build a mudbrick shed.
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Urban improvement
- community gardens regreen vacant lots and bring vegetational diversity to public open space and other areas, making them a useful tool for urban improvement
- by diversifying the use of open space and creating the opportunity for passive and active recreation, community gardens improve the urban environment
- the diversity of plant types found in community gardens provides habitat for urban wildlife, increasing their value for improving the natural environment.
Improving organiational practice
- local and state government organisations cooperating with community gardeners can improve relations with citizens and, by coopeating with each other, can improve organisational performance]
- community gardens can demonstrate local government policy, such as waste recycling, Agenda 21 and community development
- cooperation between government and citizens can strengthen civil society.
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PAGE UPDATED... Thursday, 17 January 2002
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