

The wonderful and very informed Rokiah Yaman showed us around
the Camley Street Natural Park micro anaerobic digester which is
currently being installed. It is still in its early stages but the
plan is to set up two more micro digesters in Camden and create a
small network of waste managers and biogas producers. you can find
out more or get in touch with them viat their website. www.creativehealthlab.com
Posted June 11, 2013 10:43 by Dorian


For all those who could not make it to yesterday Garden
Network Walk here is the below list might be useful, which can
be downloaded as a pdf here
WICK FISH GARDEN WALK
Biggs Square
Biggs Square, Felstead Street, E9
Tom Mitchell, Leads on the garden initiative
Sarah Bancroft, Head of TA
Cre8 Arc
Murad Zeq
Martin Krupik
www.cre8lifestylecentre.org.uk
Meabley Meadow
Christopher King
www.mableymeadow.blogspot.co.uk
Mabley Green User Group
email: mableygreenug@gmail.com
www.facebook.com/MableyGreen Edible
Forrest Garden
www.sustainablehackney.org.uk
Sunday 9 June 11-4 Tree Nursery & Forest Garden Open Day
Gainsborough School
Paul Griffiths
www.yourgrowingconcerns.blogspot.com
Leabank Square Purple garden
Mat Carter www.leabanksquare.blogspot.co.uk
Roof Garden 90 Main Yard
Tori 90 Main Yard, Wallis Rd, E9 5LN
www.90mainyard.co.uk
Frontsite Skatepark
Andrew Willis www.frontside.org.uk/frontside-gardens.html
Wonder Yard Garden
Red Gate 43 White Post Lane
Matthieu Becker
Yard Theatre
Tanith Lindon
www.the-yard.co.uk
Organic Wick
Colin www.organicwick.org.uk
Josh Strauss’ Garden
OTHERS
View Tube
Paul Shaw
View Tube Manager
Contact: viewtube@leasideregeneration.co.uk
www.theviewtube.co.uk
Bromley by Bow Centre
Lisa Cunningham, the garden at BBBC
www.bbbc.org.uk
Abbey Gardens
www.abbeygardens.org
Netwalking Club - Three Mills Loop
Gordon Joly
www.netwalking-club.org.uk/index.php/Three_Mills_Loop
Hackney Harvest
www.hackneyharvest.com
Save Leyton Marshes
www.saveleytonmarsh.wordpress.com
Posted May 20, 2013 13:36 by Dorian


Chef and waste food specialist Thomas Fletcher will lead a
small group to New Spitafield Market where we will collect surplus
food. Along the way Tom will give an introduction of his eperience
with surplus food which he harvest regularly from the market.
A short cycle ride away in Fish Island Thomas will introduce us
to his kitchen nearly entirely made from reclaimed materials where
we will turn the collected food into a tasty breakfast. All
depending on what ingredients we will find at the market. The
breakfast will be shared with a wider public and will start at
10am. You can join us at any time during the day.
We will set off to the market at 7 am from Hackney Wick Station.
If you don't want to get up at the crack of down you can join us at
Toms kitchen in Fish Island from 10am. Locations below.
Places are limited
and RSVP is needed
7.00 AM
Surpluss harvest tour - meet at Hackney Wick Train Station to set
off to New Spitafield Market
10.00 AM
Waste food preparations and breakfast at: Unit 1, Vittoria Wharf,
10 Stour Road, London E3 2NT
Posted May 14, 2013 21:11 by Dorian


CLICK HERE TO
DOWNLOAD A FREE PDF COPY
OR
CONTACT US TO PURCHASE A PRINTED COPY
CONTRIBUTIONS INCLUDE:
WICK ON WHEELS NEWS
PUBLIC WORKS, WOW AT CRE8
During February and March, Wick On Wheels has been in residence at
the Cre8 lifestyle Centre.
WICK ON WHEELS REPORT
LUCY SCHOFIELD, TAPPING INTO THE WICK
With a jolt we are off and the float gets out on a making mission
in the wider Wick.
WICK SESSION NO.8
RESPONSE – ERICA SCOURTI
RE-USE
A series of talks by practitioners working in the field of material
Re-use.
R-URBAN RESOURCES
HACKNEY WICK RE-USER GUIDE
SAM BROWN
An existing online collection of re-use resources and its potential
for growth.
WICK SESSION NO.9
RESPONSE – CHRIS CARTHY
SPACE AND TIME FOR PURSUING AMBITIONS
Can the people remedy the catastrophic effects
de-industrialisation in western cities, simply by moving in to
cheap, run-down neighbourhoods and getting on with life?
WICK SESSION NO.9
RESPONSE – LISA FIOR
SUSTAINABLE ENCLAVES
The future for the cultural sector looks under threat as many
organizations are subject to increasing rent.
WICK SESSION NO.9
RESPONSE – RICHARD BROWN
THE CREATIVE CLASSES AS CITY DEVELOPERS
It is time to recognise the creative classes as our urban
developers; because they define new ways of inhabiting forgotten
parts of our cities,
Posted May 13, 2013 20:01 by Dorian


WHEN: Sunday 19th of May 2013 2:00PM - 5:00PM
WHAT: Walk
WHERE: Biggs Square Central Court Yard, Felstead
Street, London, E9 5DT
Join us on a walk through Hackney Wick and Fish Islands'
gardens. We will be visiting some of the many green spots in the
area - from kitchen gardens to ambitious community projects and
social enterprises. We will be joined by local gardeners and
initiators behind the projects, each giving a short explanation
about their specific garden.
The walk will set off at Biggs Square and will last for
2-3 hours,
RSVP necessary
as places are limited.
Some of the places along the way: Biggs Square central courtyard
garden, Leabank Square (Purple) Garden, Mabley Meadow, Mabley
Green, Cre8 Arc, Wonder Yard Garden, Yard Theatre kitchen garden,
Organic Wick and Vittoria Wharf garden, and others ...
The walk is the result of a conversation with Sarah Bancroft
who, in collaboration with other residents, has been involved in
setting up the Biggs Square garden project (see text below). The
walk is a response to the desire to link up with other gardeners in
the area.
BIGGS SQUARE GARDEN, E9
The garden in the middle of Biggs Square, off Felstead Street in
Hackney Wick, is an experiment. It is now in its third incarnation.
As the visual focus of a square which is just four years old and
the home to 250 people who were strangers to one another until they
moved into its 122 flats and maisonettes, this is perhaps
inevitable. A community, as much as a garden, has to be grown.
In the first two years, the original landscaping – a mixture of
18 containers large enough to contain small trees, edge borders and
a 25ft x 30ft raised central bed – suffered neglect (a gardening
contract had not been put in place) and vandalism. The central bed,
particularly, under-planted with uninspiring shrubs, became a
toilet for dogs and worry for parents whose children chased across
it. After considerable discussion, Family Mosaic, the housing
association behind the square, got Groundwork, an environmental
regeneration charity, involved: in late spring 2011, the central
bed was remade into 24 "Vacant Lot" allotments for interested
residents to grow fruit and veg. Eight gardening sessions were run
to kickstart the project.
The garden's second incarnation had a good first season – until
the school holidays when a combination of the end of Groundwork's
sessions and bored children resulted in damaged crops and
disillusioned gardeners. Vacant Lot struggled through 2012 with a
dwindling number of growers and further damage. It was clear that
without more input – chiefly a fence of some kind and a led,
regular gardening club – the project would be unsustainable.
This year, we have Biggs Square gardens Mk III. A fence has been
built, the plots slightly remodelled and we have the beginnings of
a gardening club. A number of us feel the garden can be an
important part of generating a flourishing community – a place to
grow things, green the square and make strong connections. We are
watching our space!
Posted May 13, 2013 07:56 by Dorian


WHEN: Sunday 19th of May 2013 2:00PM - 5:00PM
WHAT: Walk
WHERE: Biggs Square Central Court Yard, Felstead
Street, London, E9 5DT
Join us on a walk through Hackney Wick and Fish Islands'
gardens. We will be visiting some of the many green spots in the
area - from kitchen gardens to ambitious community projects and
social enterprises. We will be joined by local gardeners and
initiators behind the projects, each giving a short explanation
about their specific garden.
The walk will set off at Biggs Square and will last for
2-3 hours,
RSVP necessary
as places are limited.
Some of the places along the way: Biggs Square central courtyard
garden, Leabank Square (Purple) Garden, Mabley Meadow, Mabley
Green, Cre8 Arc, Wonder Yard Garden, Yard Theatre kitchen garden,
Organic Wick and Vittoria Wharf garden, and others ...
The walk is the result of a conversation with Sarah Bancroft
who, in collaboration with other residents, has been involved in
setting up the Biggs Square garden project (see text below). The
walk is a response to the desire to link up with other gardeners in
the area.
BIGGS SQUARE GARDEN, E9
The garden in the middle of Biggs Square, off Felstead Street in
Hackney Wick, is an experiment. It is now in its third incarnation.
As the visual focus of a square which is just four years old and
the home to 250 people who were strangers to one another until they
moved into its 122 flats and maisonettes, this is perhaps
inevitable. A community, as much as a garden, has to be grown.
In the first two years, the original landscaping – a mixture of
18 containers large enough to contain small trees, edge borders and
a 25ft x 30ft raised central bed – suffered neglect (a gardening
contract had not been put in place) and vandalism. The central bed,
particularly, under-planted with uninspiring shrubs, became a
toilet for dogs and worry for parents whose children chased across
it. After considerable discussion, Family Mosaic, the housing
association behind the square, got Groundwork, an environmental
regeneration charity, involved: in late spring 2011, the central
bed was remade into 24 "Vacant Lot" allotments for interested
residents to grow fruit and veg. Eight gardening sessions were run
to kickstart the project.
The garden's second incarnation had a good first season – until
the school holidays when a combination of the end of Groundwork's
sessions and bored children resulted in damaged crops and
disillusioned gardeners. Vacant Lot struggled through 2012 with a
dwindling number of growers and further damage. It was clear that
without more input – chiefly a fence of some kind and a led,
regular gardening club – the project would be unsustainable.
This year, we have Biggs Square gardens Mk III. A fence has been
built, the plots slightly remodelled and we have the beginnings of
a gardening club. A number of us feel the garden can be an
important part of generating a flourishing community – a place to
grow things, green the square and make strong connections. We are
watching our space!
Posted May 13, 2013 07:56 by Dorian


Harvestmap.nl
is a web-based, European-wide network of re-users sharing
expertise, contacts and sources of materials, searchable via a
visual map-based interface or a more traditional listing. The
platform is currently in beta-version testing and is seeking users
to participate and contribute.
R-urban Wick have been asked to participate in the testing by
uploading information about re-use in London, to establish it as a
'node' on the system alongside the relatively well-populated
network in the Netherlands. Whilst some things are best re-use
locally - such as sources of material - some things are less
geographically dependent (such as re-use tips and points of
reference).
The site offers levels of membership that allow access to
different kinds of content - membership at any level is free for
the rest of this year, after which a small fee would be charge to
upper membership levels to cover administration of the site.
R-urban has registered as a 'Scout' - the most active membership
level - and have begun uploading our research material and local
contacts. Scouts can also act as 'brokers', serving as a point of
contact for their address books and known sources of re-usable
material. We would like to use the site to make people aware that
we can act in this role - primarily brokering how-to knowledge and
disseminating the results of our experimentation, but also in
connecting those that approach us in need of materials with those
we know who have them. The site has a built in mechanism that
allows you to easily give feedback on how it is operating, and any
problems you encounter. Although it is primarily in Dutch, there
are sections in English and Google Translate does the rest. Join
us!
*** Harvestmap.nl has been developed by Netherlands-based
Superuse Studios -
formerly 2012 Architekten - and will be launched as part of an
exhibition at the
Architecture Foundation opening on 4th June entitled
'InsideFlows: The Superuse Approach to Design', open until the 31st
July. ***
Posted May 7, 2013 16:35 by Dorian


The most immediate and direct Re-use centre so far
Posted May 2, 2013 10:12 by Dorian


This is a Call for young teams of architects, designers,
artists, students or professionals of ecological building, who are
interested in recycling and eco-design and who are keen to develop
full scale prototypes within the framework of a civic project in a
suburban town near Paris. They should be passionate makers and
possibly also fans of… AAA’s work.
Please have a look into this Call for Residency (bellow), which
is the first in a series that we initiate within the R-Urban
project currently developed in Colombes (http://r-urban.net/).
Please do not hesitate to contact us for more information. We
are really excited about possible collaborations and look forward
to receiving your expression of interest!
Download the
pdf brief here
AAA team
PS. Please feel free to circulate the information within your
networks
Posted April 29, 2013 12:46 by Dorian