Hippie urban farmers to get evicted from NYC plot before they can harvest crops as new luxury development breaking ground

About 600 urban farmers say they are being evicted from their Williamsburg plot so suddenly that they won’t even be able to harvest their last batch of crops.The volunteer gardeners toiling for Oko Farms — which provides fresh produce to low-income Brooklynites — was warned by Two Trees Management in August that they would need to pack up the hippie operation by November.The sustainable farmers had been borrowing the real-estate company’s vacant plot along the East River between Metropolitan Avenue and North Third Street since May 2021 as the developer awaited approval to break ground on the final piece of its luxury megadevelopment.As part of the deal, Oko Farms was granted free rent, but Two Trees retained the right to kick it out with just three months’ notice.“While we understood that this site would not be permanent, the abruptness of the termination of our lease is unfortunate,” Oko leadership wrote in an online statement.

“However, this is neither surprising nor unusual as far as urban farming is concerned.Land access is one of the, if not the biggest roadblock for urban farms and it has been a constant challenge for us since our inception.”Oko is asking that Two Trees reconsider the sudden eviction and allow the group to stay through the mid-winter so it can reap the benefits of its harvest, as well as find a new home for its volunteer gardeners.The makeshift farmers use a unique aquaponic system that relies on fish waste to fertilize plants.

Those plants then help to filter water for the fish in a closed-loop system that uses 80% less water than traditional soil farming.But Two Trees says the requested extension is out of the question.The company has instead offered one extra week on the plot and to store the group’s equipment in a nearby structure until March.“Two Trees has a long history of providing space for interim community use at its construction sites, and we have been able to host OKO rent-free for four years, longer t...

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Publisher: New York Post

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