FROM BROWN TO GREEN
Erika Yarrow explores a vibrant eco-facility on the
outskirts of Toronto.
The Evergreen Brick Works is an inspiring place, oozes potential
and despite being in the early stages of development, it is
engaging the public and providing space for the arts. Only
days before my visit, the still derelict factory area had housed a
concert, which had been performed by candlelight, utilising the
various platforms and structures of the former brick works as stage
areas. I am not sure what the health and safety guys back in
the UK would make of it, but the idea of this magical place staging
a musical extravaganza certainly captured my imagination.
Evergreen, the organisation heading up the initiative to
transform Toronto's historic Don Valley Brick Works into a centre
of environmental education and the arts, is a charity that focuses
on building relationships between nature, culture and the
community. Evergreen encourages a hands-on approach to the
environment and is keen to demonstrate how nature can be
experienced in an urban setting.
From 1889-1984 the Don Valley Brick Works was one of Canada's
pre-eminent brickyards, producing the material from which many of
Toronto's heritage buildings and Canada's national landmarks were
constructed. The 16 hectare site is made up of the Don Valley Brick
Works Park - an 11.5 hectare nature area and park incorporating
gardens, wetlands, wildflower meadows, ravine forests and trails -
and the Don Valley Brick Works Industrial Pad - a complex of
historic, industrial buildings stretching over five
hectares.
Evergreen has been engaged in the naturalisation of the site
since 1998. But it was only in 2004 that the City of Toronto
granted permission for the redevelopment of the industrial
pad. Evergreen has great plans for this 184,000 square foot
industrial space. The site will house Evergreen Gardens, a
collection of demonstration gardens, showcasing how schools can
green their environments and how public green spaces can be managed
in greater harmony with nature. A plant nursery will supply
native plant species and market pavilions will house a weekend
farmers' market. In addition, space will be offered to
charitable, non-profit organizations and socially-conscious private
enterprises working in the fields of the environment, education,
community and the arts. Space will also be created for
community programmes, including an art club, woodworker collectives
and theatre groups.
In order to utilise fully the potential of this project,
Evergreen is working with a variety of like-minded partners.
The Jamie Kennedy Foundation is a not-for-profit organisation that
will be running the Brick Works flagship restaurant. Run on
Slow Food principles, the facility will also be used as a culinary
education centre, guest chefs offering demonstrations.
Training will be provided for local students who will be able to
showcase their work at the restaurant and the foundation will
initiate events that place sustainability at the heart of good
gastronomy.
The Gardiner Museum of Ceramic Art will be heading up the Brick
Works ceramics programme which will offer ceramics classes and
lectures and provide space for visiting artists. The
museum has been involved in all of the festivals that Evergreen has
held at the site over the past two years and ceramics activities
have been found to be popular with families, initiating a
connection with the geology and history of the site's
brick-making tradition.
Outward Bound Canada will be running team-building and personal
and community development exercises at the Brick Works, creating
rope courses and climbing walls that will utilise the industrial
archaeology of the site. The Brick Works will also provide a
base for the organisation's experiential environment programme.
With nearly a 100 years experience of working with deprived
children, Moorelands Community Services, is working with Evergreen
to run summer day camps at the Brick Works, where children can
learn about nature and take part in hikes, cooking sessions and
drama.
In addition, the YMCA of Greater Toronto is teaming up with
Evergreen to offer opportunities for training and employment for
at-risk youths, with the intention of creating social enterprise
programmes that provide meaningful employment for these young
people.
Evergreen Brick Works is set to be a community space that has
relevance to all ages and backgrounds, providing everything from
hands-on green gardening to information about innovative
eco-building practices, and space for theatre and music
productions, art exhibitions, eco-conscious retail, conferences and
private functions.
Plans for the environmental credentials of the buildings are
equally ambitious. Evergreen wants the Brick Works to be one
of the most sustainable buildings in Canada and analysis of the
plans identifies the building as achieving 'gold' level LEED
certification - Canada's Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design rating framework. The site will demonstrate a system
that is capable, through landscaping and water use, of managing
stormwater largely on site. Green roofs will be utilised to
minimise heat island effect, and energy and water use within the
site will be minimised by various high-efficiency and renewable
technologies.
On completion, the Evergreen experience with be one that
integrates fully practical environmental education with arts and
business resources, community activities and entertainment.
What I found interesting was the way in which the 'organic' pace of
the project was enabling the community to engage with the whole
process of regeneration. Evergreen has been encouraging
visitors and hosting events for a number of years. As a
result the community is seeing the Brick Works develop step-by-step
- created habitats becoming naturalised, initiatives taking shape,
green technologies being installed. Genuine links have
been created with the community, resulting in an energy that cannot
help but inspire. There can be no better way of understanding the
true meaning of sustainable development than experiencing it from
the ground up in this way.
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