| Literature DB >> 33066596 |
Pauline Marsh1, Suzanne Mallick1, Emily Flies2, Penelope Jones3, Sue Pearson4, Iain Koolhof4, Jason Byrne5, Dave Kendal5.
Abstract
Campus community gardens (CCGs) can potentially improve student health and wellbeing, mitigate social and ecological problems, and nurture university-community relationships. However, CCGs are located in complex socio-political and ecological settings and many community gardens struggle or fail. However, few studies have assessed the socio-political/ecological context of a garden setting prior to its development to understand the potential barriers and enablers of success. Our study assessed the socio-spatial context of a proposed CCG at a student university accommodation site. We engaged diverse university and community stakeholders through interviews, focus groups and a survey to explore their perceptions of the space generally and the proposed garden specifically. Visual observations and public life surveying were used to determine patterns of behavior. Results confirmed known problems associated with an underutilized site that provides little opportunity for lingering or contact with nature; and unknown barriers, including socially disconnected stakeholders and community distrust of the university. The research also uncovered positive enablers, such as stakeholder appreciation of the social, wellbeing and ecological benefits that a CCG could deliver. Our findings suggest that an in-depth exploration of a proposed garden context can be an important enabler of its success.Entities:
Keywords: campus community garden; health; socio-spatial connection; sustainability; trust; university students; wellbeing
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33066596 PMCID: PMC7602408 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17207476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Study methods with the associated data collection process and relevant stakeholders.
| Method | Data Collection Detail | Stakeholders (Number)/Code |
|---|---|---|
| Interviews | Semi-structured, in depth, face-to-face | Local Business employees and owners (15 sites)/BS |
| Interviews | Semi-structured, brief, face-to-face | Members of the public utilizing the public outdoor space ( |
| Focus Group | 2-hour semi-structured discussion | Urban green practitioners and community gardeners |
| Observation | Public Life observation (7 hrs, various time periods, 4 days) | Members of the public utilizing the spaces, including student residents |
| Survey | Online | Local communities, mostly focused on students residing in UTAS city accommodation ( |
Figure 1Inner-city residents respond to the Southern Future Strategy announcement.
Figure 2Aerial view of the student apartment complex and proposed garden sites [Google Maps].
Figure 3Street view of the apartment complex [Photographer: John Gollings AM].
Figure 4Aerial view of the proposed garden site and existing greenery in private and public areas. [Photographer: John Gollings AM].
Figure 5Café exterior, including “The Loop” video installation.
Observational Data summary.
| Day/Time | Method/Period of Observation (min) | Weather | Episodes of Movement through ( | Episodes of Stationary Activity ( | Total Episodes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thursday 9 a.m. | Researcher/40 | cool | 12 | 0 | 12 |
| Thursday 1 p.m. | Researcher/40 | warm | 17 | 3 | 20 |
| Thursday 4:05 p.m. | Research/40 | cool | 16 | 0 | 16 |
| Thursday 7 p.m. | Researcher/40 | cool | 4 | 0 | 4 |
| Friday 10 a.m. | Video/60 | cool | 39 | 1 | 40 |
| Friday 12 noon | Video/60 | cool | 61 | 7 | 68 |
| Friday 2:45 p.m. | Video/60 | warm | 42 | 4 | 46 |
| Friday 4:20 p.m. | Video/60 | cool | 44 | 2 | 46 |
| Saturday (1) * 10 a.m. | Researcher/40 | cool | 17 | 1 | 18 |
| Saturday (1) 12 noon | Researcher/40 | warm | 15 | 1 | 16 |
| Monday 9 a.m. | Video/60 | warm | 37 | 1 | 38 |
| Monday 1 p.m. | Video/60 | warm | 54 | 5 | 59 |
| Monday 3:30 p.m. | Video/60 | warm | 36 | 1 | 37 |
| Saturday (2) 1 p.m. | Researcher/40 | warm | 20 | 3 | 23 |
| Saturday (2) 3 p.m. | Researcher/40 | warm | 2 | 27 | 29 |
| TOTALS | 740 min | 416 | 56 | 472 |
* The Saturday sessions were split over two to accommodate a major sporting event; Spring weather conditions were categorised into two broad descriptors by the researchers on site.
Figure 6Episodes of movement and stationary activity observed.
Figure 7Types of activities observed.
Figure 8A comparison of respondents Personal Wellbeing Index (pwi), Nature Relatedness, and Trust in the university to engage with (a) students and (b) the local community, compared with reference results from other studies. 95% confidence intervals are shown.
Figure 9Respondents individual Personal Wellbeing Index scores. 95% confidence intervals are shown.
Figure 10Four steps to an effective campus community garden.
Additional qualitative data.
| Theme | Subtheme | Participant Voices |
|---|---|---|
| Health and Wellbeing | General benefits from green spaces, nature and gardening in the city | Basically, I guess, happiness levels improve with greenery I guess, you get a little break from daily living and your work life and the greenery just improves mood. That’s just general. I don’t know any research, it’s just a general thought. |
| Specific student mental health needs | If you have 400 students in there that, like aren’t leaving their room, then you have a massive issue like depression coming at you. If it’s not happening already, in a year or two it is going to. And that’s just from people being isolated, well self-isolating, ‘cos they have nothing else to do apart from look at a screen. Then again, you come outside and there is a giant fucking screen … I can sit in this window and watch maybe 25 people leave that building a day. And there is like 440 of them in there. It’s pretty poor. BS1 | |
| Social Connectivity | Social disconnection | I thought it looked cool … and I thought it would be good to have community, and to be honest there isn’t much of a community here, but good to have a community around me and be a lot better for studying. |
| Emptiness | Well most of the time when I come through there is no one here. It is very vacant and empty. The café doesn’t seem to be, you know it’s all very quiet. It surprises me when there is so much accommodation that there are not more people around. | |
| Transience | I mean I walk past here everyday but stopping and using it, I would say probably only a couple of times a month. | |
| Spatial constraints for social connection | The biggest downfall is that there is not a whole lot of sun in the site. Like it’s great, it’s good to have a little space off the street, there’s stuff for people to interact with but in the cool months of the year it’s too cold for people to hang around in. I think in the summertime it will be really nice, ‘cos it will be a bit shady and people can sit and hang out. It would be good I suppose if there was more interaction inside and outside. | |
| Confusion over public/private use | I thought it might just be for the people that live in these apartments just to come down and have a bit of fresh air. | |
| Potential for the site to connect people to each other | There’s plenty of area out the back for the students and the kids to do something, you could have a basketball court out there or something. Something they want. Kids who live up in the hills or whatever … can come down and still play basketball and interact. And it gets the [international students] interacting with the locals and stuff like that. | |
| Nature Connectedness | Desire to connect | And it is really hard to rationalize what it means to connect with nature. But you notice the effect it has, and in the city, there are very few opportunities to develop an active relationship with nature … Instead of just having this conceptual connection to nature, having a physical sensory connection with it. And so, I think community gardens and spaces like this can help people form an active relationship with nature. Which is missing from the city environment. |
| Lack of knowledge and/or opportunity | Like I grew up out in the country and so I got a lot of it. If I lived in the city I don’t know what kind of green spaces I would use, ‘cos I have never had to kind of go and seek them out. To get my fix. | |
| I might be a bit hard for the students, well I don’t know, but it might be a bit hard for the students to think ‘well let’s go and pick some parsley out of the garden’, well some of them would. | ||
| Midtown-UTas community building | Food Production | So perhaps if you think of it more as, how can you make it a welcoming space for community activity rather than how can we make it a food production space, ‘cos in terms of food production it is probably not really an ideal site. |
| Managing a successful community garden | From my experience … you need to have someone managing it and you need to have that person coordinating volunteers, and if you can get that team of volunteers engaged, then it really is a special thing … if everyone is engaged with the whole garden, and they work within the whole garden, it really works very well. I have about 15 active volunteers at the moment and a waiting list, and it really does work well. But it has taken five years to develop that model. And people come and go. But you have to have that engagement with the people that want to be engaged. | |
| Global environmental sustainability | It is so essential for our connection to the world and it also ties into this broader context of ecological crisis. And if we don’t really have a connection to nature then we are not really going to make the changes that we need in this time. | |
| The Midtown community profile | ‘Cos our business is so much about community. Our customers come to us, our regulars do, come as much for our product as they do for us, it’s a family business, the personality of our staff, the chats we have over our coffee rushes. We exchange information on a regular basis with the public. Like I organized, with some of the other business owners a street party out here earlier this year. And that was basically taking away the parking spaces, having extra seating, live music, and just a bunch of hay bales, and turned a few kegs into tables as well. And it was an awesome day, it worked really well. | |
| Previous mis/communication and current mis/trust | It was put into concept, we were excited by what the original drawings were which had community space, green space and useable space by the public. But it kinda didn’t eventuate like that. | |
| Opinions on UTas moving into the city | We have to look after the community as well, I think a lot of people’s opinions on UTas are very jaded at the moment. And I think to work with the community to establish relationships and to welcome the community into those spaces, as well, so that it is not 100% student focused. I guess in a sense without sounding silly, that people don’t feel left out. That you don’t take over the city, which is kinda how it feels at the moment. | |
| UTas and Social inequities | This idea that they’ve got too much money for a start, and I think it’s around all the attention on the homeless people, and people think ‘well the university has all this money’, and they think ‘well then why are other people struggling, not just homeless people but other disadvantaged people?’ I think there is that perception. And that’s not the university’s fault at all, it’s a much broader issue. I mean, I just think it’s good to have as much diversity as you can get in a city. But I am not sure this will do that. Do you know what I mean? I mean, we are not seeing any real positives out of the building being there. | |
| Good will toward the CCG idea | You need to make it a hub. So, you want interaction, and from my point of view … I can see room for collaboration. |