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Hamilton

Depaving Hamilton begins with colourful gardens replacing grey concrete

Packed with native species, the gardens add more green space, increase biodiversity and help reduce stormwater run-off by acting like a sponge when it rains, says Green Venture's Liz Enriquez.

Green Venture is reducing flooding, increasing biodiversity one native garden at a time

woman stands in front of plants
Liz Enriquez, Green Venture project manager, ran a community planting event at Westinghouse HQ in Hamilton on Sept. 5. (Samantha Beattie/CBC)

Pockets of colourful gardens are appearing acrossHamilton's lower city as "depaving" efforts ramp up.

Green Venture, a non-profit environmental organization, is leading the way, planting 16 gardensin recent years primarily along Barton Street, saidLiz Enriquez, green infrastructure project manager for the group.

It has also helped fund dozens of rain gardens on private properties through a rebate program, she said.

"Little projects make a big impact," said Enriquez. "It's the same philosophy as, 'a single vote matters.'"

Packed with native species, the gardens add more green space, increase biodiversity and help reduce storm-water run-off by acting like a sponge when it rains, she said.

If it's not absorbed quicklyinto the ground, storm water can collect pollution and litter, carrying itinto Hamilton's waterways, Enriquez said. The impacts of too much pollution have played outin the harbour this summer, where toxic algaehavethrived.

WATCH| How small gardens can make a big difference in Hamilton:

Why Hamilton residents are looking to replace concrete with gardens

7 days ago
Duration 1:20
Green Venture's Liz Enriquez explains the benefits of planting gardens full of native species across the city.

Swapping concrete for greenery 'incredibly welcomed'

One bright morning earlier this month, Enriquez unloadednative plants, setting up for a community planting event atWestinghouse HQ a restored office building off Barton Street East.

Later that day, volunteers would be planting dozens of flowersaround the property in place of"poor looking grass," said Tyler Cowie, owner of Branch HQ in Westinghouse.

And rain gardens full of plants that thrive in wet conditions would take shape arounddownspouts.

"It's important for everybody to do these small projects to improve walkability, drainage and just community spirit," Cowie said.

Coun. Nrinder Nann, who represents Ward 3, said she's been pushing the city to find ways to swap concrete for greenery and hopes more areas will be transformed soon.

"It's been incredibly welcomed by residents who live on those streets," Nann said.

Last year, council dedicated $350,000 for depaving projects on city-owned lands including boulevards and streets, and to test ways to increase storm-water retention, tree canopy coverage and urban greening, according to the city's website.

people gardening outside brick building
Volunteers planted native species outside the office building near Barton Street East. (Submitted by Green Venture)

Recently, city staff dug up concrete and interlocking brick outside an indoor go-kart racetrack. They laid sod and planted trees, turning it into a "mini-parkette," said Nann.

"It really has given us the opportunity to think about these underutilized spaces that could become little pockets of reprieve for folks," she said.

At Westinghouse on Sept. 5, volunteers filled freshly tilled plots with black-eyed susans, wild geraniums, hyssops,asters and other shrubs, turning the otherwise barren landscape into a lush garden.

"People want to learn more about green spaces," Enriquez said. "Our goal is for them to take what they learn and bring it home to their own backyards."