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UBC Farm

49°15′03″N 123°14′20″W / 49.25083°N 123.23889°W / 49.25083; -123.23889

UBC Farm
Map
General information
TypeFarm and forest system
Location3461 Ross Drive
University Endowment Lands
Town or cityVancouver, BC
CountryCanada
Coordinates49°15′03″N 123°14′20″W / 49.25083°N 123.23889°W / 49.25083; -123.23889
Construction started1915
Renovated2000
OwnerCentre for Sustainable Food Systems, part of UBC Faculty of Land and Food Systems
Grounds20 hectares
Website
ubcfarm.ubc.ca

The UBC Farm is a 24-hectare farm and forest system on the southern end of the University of British Columbia (UBC) campus in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The farm is operated by the Centre for Sustainable Food Systems, which is part of the Faculty of Land and Food Systems, and has existed in its current form since 2000. It hosts a variety of crops and fruits, as well as some animals and composting facilities. Several academic programs allow the students to use the farm for research and teaching.[citation needed]

History

The farm, located on traditional Musqueam First Nations territory, has been a part of UBC since 1915. However, the farm of 1915 was not located at its current location but reached from the Nitobe Memorial Garden to the Thunderbird Stadium. In 1970, the farm moved closer to its current location at Wesbrook Place. During the 1990s, activity in the agricultural area at the south end of campus declined, and in 1997 the area was declared a Future Housing Reserve. A student-initiated program, supported by the Faculties of Science and Forestry, began in 1999 to advocate for the revival of the UBC Farm.[1] During 2008 there was an announcement of plans to reduce the size of the farm or move it somewhere else. This caused the Alma Mater Society club Friends of the UBC Farm to start the "Save the Farm" campaign and advocate for the conservation of the farm.[2] This campaign caused a shift in policy, and on December 1, 2009, UBC's Board of Governors stated that the site of the UBC Farm would no longer be considered a housing reserve.[3] In 2011, the area was declared a "Green Academic" zone, which "will be kept primarily as open areas to support land-based teaching, research, and community engagement".[4]

Farm facilities and mission

Farm facilities

The farm consists of two small buildings, which can serve a variety of purposes, including as classroom, office, kitchen, storage, and processing areas, and it is surrounded by a coastal hemlock forest. Two tractors and other tools are stored in several sheds on site, and two glass greenhouses and three polytunnels offer to extend the seasons and further spread the crops. A 300 m3 composting facility can process the farm's and other local produce wholesalers' organic waste and turn it into soil fertilizer. Two trailers offer staff accommodation to take care of the animals 24 hours a day. The farm includes a wide range of crops and livestock, which represent the agricultural possibilities of the Pacific Northwest. Vancouver's moderate maritime climate allows cultivation of certain crops year round. Over 70 different kind of apples grow in the heritage orchard, and the farm also features grapes, blueberries, raspberries, hops, and truffles. The farm normally hosts some free-range poultry and honeybee colonies, and has occasionally been a seasonal home for cattle. It provides a habitat for "a range of birds, mammals, amphibians, and reptiles not found elsewhere in the city".[5]

References

  1. ^ "History – Centre for Sustainable Food Systems". UBC. Retrieved March 20, 2013.
  2. ^ "Save the Farm – Friends of the UBC Farm Blog". Wordpress. Retrieved March 20, 2013.
  3. ^ "History – Centre for Sustainable Food Systems". UBC. Retrieved March 20, 2013.
  4. ^ "Land Use Plan" (PDF). UBC. Retrieved March 20, 2013.
  5. ^ "Farm features – Centre for Sustainable Food Systems". UBC. Retrieved March 20, 2013.