A green garden on red clay: creating a new urban common as a form of political gardening in Cologne, Germany

In March 2012, a brownfield site in Cologne was transformed into "a green garden on red clay", when a community garden called NeuLand (new land) was created. This paper investigates in how far NeuLand is typical for a new form of political engagement 2.0, focused on local problems at peopl...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Local environment 2015-10, Vol.20 (10), p.1148-1174
Main Authors: Follmann, Alexander, Viehoff, Valérie
Format: Article
Language:eng
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Summary:In March 2012, a brownfield site in Cologne was transformed into "a green garden on red clay", when a community garden called NeuLand (new land) was created. This paper investigates in how far NeuLand is typical for a new form of political engagement 2.0, focused on local problems at people's doorstep rather than global critiques of political systems, which finds its expression in direct actions typical for the networked society, e.g. "green flash mobs." Its potential to provide a blueprint for imagining and enacting alternative futures and new ways for citizens to claim their "right to the city" is being assessed. NeuLand provides an experiment with new forms of (urban) commons and possibly a (re)turn to the "liveable city" to replace the current neoliberal ideal of the "entrepreneurial city" [Harvey, D., 1989. From manageralism to entrepreneuralism: the transformation of urban governance in late capitalism. Geografiska Annaler, Series B, Human Geography, 71 (1), 3-17], developing new solutions to problems of urban management and city development that extend beyond the voluntary engagement of citizens within the logic of the neoliberal "big society." Extending the scope beyond the analysis of urban gardening projects as examples of sustainable food production, or as vehicles for fostering community cohesion, integration or social capital, the NeuLand experiment is linked to wider debates of alternative and more sustainable socio-ecological futures than those currently practised in the newly "neoliberalizing cities" of Germany.
ISSN:1354-9839
1469-6711