Seed City is a community garden, founded in 2010 by students from the Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology (ETH), a technical university in Zurich, Switzerland. The project was the winner of
“ecoworks”, a workshop for ETH students and staff, which aims to reduce the carbon footprint of the
campus (Hofmänner & Pohl 2010: 52, 57). ETH provided the ground for setting up the garden and
supported the project in the first two years financially. The connection to a university is what
distinguishes this community garden from others, since there are many synergy effects, such as
financial support, member recruitment as well as educational support.
The garden is on the outskirts of the Science City ETH campus, which is located at the periphery of
Zurich close to the forest. Since massive construction works are going on on the campus, the garden
is on one side flanked by new buildings and on the other side it borders the forest and agricultural
land. Therefore, the garden can be seen as the connecting element between the urban and the
rural.
The main aim of the garden is to teach people how to successfully grow their own food. In order to
achieve this, professional gardeners are invited to share their knowledge with the members of
SeedCity on “activity days” and these people can then subsequently teach others about what they have
learnt. They call this process “spread the seed” in order to involve as many people as
possible.
The garden is also a platform to meet like-minded people and to socialise. A fireplace is the
gathering point for barbequing in the summer.
Today, the garden lives on its own budged. Members have to pay a contribution, which is reinvested
into equipment and the salary for the professional gardeners.
Of course everybody can become a gardener at SeedCity. In the beginning only students and Ph.D.
students from ETH were participating, but since then local residents became interested and are
gardening with them now.
Over the years the garden has diversified. Not only vegetables and berries are grown there, but
since 2013 a fruit orchard is part of their garden. Furthermore, a small pond was built and a
possible extension of the garden area is under discussion with ETH.
Unfortunately, no connections were made to the agronomy department of ETH, but this could be a
possible strength for similar future projects in collaboration with universities in other cities
(All information from: seedcity.ch and email communication with SeedCity managing board 30
Image credit: SeedCity.ch