Twenty-one Urban Ag Grants will help address long-standing challenges in city neighborhoods in 10 counties.
Projects in Allegheny, Blair, Butler, Chester, Crawford, Dauphin, Erie, Lawrence, Montgomery, Philadelphia will feed healthier futures for Pennsylvania students, families, and economy.
Melrose Park, PA – Today, Agriculture Secretary Russell Redding announced 21 Urban Agriculture Infrastructure Grants totaling $502,140 to projects that help address long-standing challenges urban farmers face in growing local, farm-fresh produce in city neighborhoods in 10 counties across Pennsylvania. Secretary Redding made this announcement after touring The Farm at Wyncote Academy in Montgomery County, where a grant will fund a new fruit tree orchard, expanding outdoor, hands-on science and career learning opportunities for at-risk middle and high school students.
“Seeing a school farm like Wyncote Academy’s is seeing the power agriculture has to change lives.” Secretary Redding said. “The Shapiro Administration is committed funding lasting solutions to challenging problems. Getting fresh, healthy food into urban neighborhoods, using small plots of land to generate income, bridge differences, and introduce teens from tough circumstances to career opportunities and healthier futures are just a few ways Urban Ag grants are changing Pennsylvania cities for the better.”
With funding from prior grants through the program, Pennsylvanians are working to increase fresh food access in areas where it is scarce; break down racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic barriers; and overcome historical inequities to grow opportunities for their communities to thrive.
Pennsylvania has invested more than $3.2 million in urban agriculture through the program since 2019, including $736,000 in invested in 26 projects in 2023-24. In total, 160 projects in cities across Pennsylvania are expanding fresh food access in locations often served by a single convenience store.
Funded projects include purchases such as greenhouses, off-grid energy and water systems, cold storage, and tools to expand the reach of organizations that feed economic, community, and personal growth through agriculture.
The program funds microgrants of $2,500 in matching funds for one-time projects or a single entity, as well as collaboration grants. Collaboration grants provide up to $50,000 in matching funds for cooperative or regional efforts to share resources, support community development, and combine products of small farmers, building collective power to supply fresh food in underserved neighborhoods.
Urban neighborhoods are determined by criteria from the Center for Rural Pennsylvania.
2024-25 Urban Agriculture Grant recipients:
Allegheny County
Grow Pittsburgh – $25,000
To add 3,000 square feet of new food production space to the urban agriculture network in the Pittsburgh region by establishing five new community gardens and expanding existing garden spaces.
Hilltop Urban Farm – $43,000
For purchase of a cargo van to make weekly produce deliveries to foodbanks, and farm markets in their farmer incubator program.
Tree Pittsburgh – $2,500
To expand reforestation efforts across Western Pennsylvania to meet the demand for high-quality nursery stock through its seed program.
Lettuce Turnip the Beet Sustainability Collective – $2,125
For Our Village Garden, the first or several planned outdoor urban farms and indoor grow facilities that house small, temperature-controlled biodome operations.
Blair County
Blair County Conservation District – $2,500
For urban agricultural education at NatureWorksPark to help farmers learn to extend their growing season with high tunnels and irrigation systems.
Butler County
Community Partnership Inc. – $32,000
The Artisan Food Hub Project will redevelop two empty lots into food production spaces, which will include storage, raised garden beds, and a rainwater collection system to support expanded charitable food options in the City of Butler.
Chester County
Down to Earth Harvest – $50,000
To increase cold storage for locally grown produce from urban producers and other partner farms.
Chester and Montgomery Counties
Trellis for Tomorrow – $2,500
Inclusive urban gardening for vocational training for individuals with disabilities – seed skills equipment and tool purchases will increase efficiency in production of organic produce for urban communities.
Chester and Philadelphia Counties
Megan Storm – $2,500
For purchase of a mobile cold storage unit for a collaboration with Chester County producers to develop a whole-diet CSA program to better serve families facing food insecurity or diet-related health issues.
Crawford and Erie Counties
Glow and Grow Urban Collective – $18,348
Erie Community Growers – a group of growers, small businesses, schools, and nonprofits – will collaborate to expand the existing urban food system, create new entrepreneurship opportunities, and overcome historical inequities.
Dauphin County
Wildheart Ministries – $50,000
To expand the Hill Farm’s capacity for food preparation and storage, as well as improve distribution capability, food safety, and quality of fresh, locally-grown, organic produce in Harrisburg.
Lawrence County
Don Enterprises – $2,445
For expansion of East Side Grove Community Garden in partnership with Penn State Extension’s Master Gardeners to include an orchard.
Montgomery County
Variety – The Children’s Charity of The Delaware Valley – $18,345
Electrical and lighting upgrades in a greenhouse used for vocational training, climate science and nutrition education for young adults with disabilities. Upgrades will provide long-term energy efficiency and cost-savings.
Montgomery and Philadelphia Counties
Wyncote Academy – $42,500
To plant a 200-tree fruit orchard and understory of berry bushes to maximize efficiency in the alternative school’s urban farm, increasing access to fresh fruit in an area that is a food desert.
Philadelphia County
Fair Amount Food Forest – $50,000
For new water service in a nonprofit community and educational farm in East Fairmount Park in the Strawberry Mansion neighborhood, as well as two walk-in coolers for a new local farmers market and expanded food pantry operated by Fair Amount Food Forest and Brothers of Strawberry Mansion.
Spring Garden Community Development Corporation – $40,000
To provide food for city food cupboards for local families in need through a community garden in partnership with Garden in the City Harvest program. Waring Elementary School families will benefit.
Food Moxie – $35,140
For experiential learning in gardening, farming, nutrition, and culinary arts – facilitating community engagement that supports self-determination in the food system.
The Tachs Farm – $50,000
To install a greenhouse and training space on their urban farm.
Weavers Way Co-op – $28,472
To install five caterpillar tunnels that will serve as growing and educational spaces at two farm locations in Philadelphia. In partnership with W.B. Saul Agricultural High School and Awbury Arboretum, the tunnels will provide experiential opportunities for students, urban agricultural producers, and the public to learn about using innovative technologies to extend the growing season.
First Stop Recovery – $2,465
For a recovery garden, built and maintained by residents in recovery, which serves as a vital therapeutic tool and symbol of recovery. This grant will fund essential maintenance and improvements to ensure the garden continues to provide a healing environment for current and future residents.
Urban Creators – $1,300
To enhance infrastructure and increase fruit production through improved care and growing conditions for perennial vining fruits including grapes.
Learn more about Urban Agriculture Grants and other PA Farm Bill grants and initiatives to grow Pennsylvania agriculture on the PA Farm Bill webpage.
Read about more commonsense investments to keep Pennsylvania agriculture competitive and thriving in Governor Josh Shapiro’s 2025-26 budget proposal at shapirobudget.pa.gov.
Learn how Governor Josh Shapiro’s Economic Development Strategy recognizes agriculture as key to our future economic success.
Photos and video of the tour are available at PAcast.com
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