OSU Mansfield to pilot urban agriculture project

FFAR grant will help OSU Mansfield launch $2 million microfarm project.

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OSU Mansfield, micro-farm, local food,
This micro-farm, built on the OSU campus in Mansfield in late 2017, sits on one-third of an acre and includes two high tunnels and over 50 raised beds. Now the $2 million Mansfield Microfarm Project will provide both training and microfarm kits to approximately a dozen initial producers, and help them farm cooperatively and aggregate their produce for marketability. (Farm and Dairy file photo)

MANSFIELD, Ohio — The Foundation for Food and Agriculture Research awarded a matching grant to the Ohio State University at Mansfield to launch a $2 million urban sustainable food system project.

The project was developed and is being managed by Associate Professor of Environmental History Kip Curtis at The Ohio State University at Mansfield.

The microfarm network will progress over three years, allowing researchers and growers to fine tune the growing, harvesting and marketing processes for the local setting.

In the meantime, a parallel interdisciplinary research team will measure the ways in which this embedded local production system impacts a range of local issues from food insecurity, to urban beautification, to food literacy and educational achievement.

Working with growers

The Mansfield Microfarm Project will provide both training and microfarm kits to approximately a dozen initial producers, and help them farm cooperatively and aggregate their produce for marketability.

“This pilot effort of microfarms will establish a food system in the city of Mansfield that can collectively generate the volume and quality of specialty crops to compete for commercial markets,” said Curtis.

“It will keep local dollars circulating within the community, rather than exporting them out, while promoting healthier lifestyles by providing residents with access to fresh, local produce right there in the neighborhood.”

Background

The project started in 2016 when Curtis brought his concept to faculty and staff participating in the Initiative for Food and AgriCultural Transformation (InFACT), an Ohio State Discovery Themes initiative, which then catalyzed a cross-disciplinary conversation to develop the project.

OSU Mansfield, microfarm, Kip Curtis,
Kip Curtis, OSU Mansfield, will be leading the microfarm pilot project.

Curtis also led a group of six Ohio State Mansfield students in the design and construction of a demonstration urban microfarm on the Ohio State Mansfield Campus, which consisted of two high tunnels, housing raised plant beds, as well as several outside plant beds on a one-third-acre lot. They completed construction in the fall of 2017.

When fully implemented, the local production pilot system will represent a scalable fresh produce marketing core for local vegetable producers.

Scalability

“This project has the potential to transform agriculture production while simultaneously fostering local economic development,” said FFAR’s Executive Director Sally Rockey. “We are excited to pilot the microfarm model and explore the impact for the Mansfield community.”

Curtis said the project’s impact extends beyond the original microfarmers and one small urban aggregation system.

“If successful, such models present opportunities for urban growers in other redeveloping cities across Ohio and beyond.”

Funding

The FFAR grant provides one-to-one matching funding to develop and study a pilot community-based sustainable food production and aggregation system in Mansfield, Ohio.

The match was made possible in large part through partnerships with the North End Community Improvement Collaborative, Mind and Body Align and Braintree Business Solutions, as well as the support of the Fran and Warren Rupp Donor Advised Fund of the Richland County Foundation.

The FFAR funding is also matched in part by donations from the new Sustainability Institute at Ohio State, as well as in-kind support from researchers in Ohio State’s College of Food, Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, Fisher College of Business, Knowlton School of Architecture, Department of History, Kirwan Institute for the Study of Race and Ethnicity and College of Social Work.

“This is truly a community effort,” Curtis said. “Our partners really hit it out of the park with their generous support for the vision.”

The Ohio State University Mansfield campus is a 640 acre plot of mostly forested land in Richland County, Ohio.

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