Asheville GreenWorks partnered up April 11 with volunteers to transform an empty green lot at Hillcrest Apartments into an orchard.
GreenWorks received a grant to plant its sixth community orchard at Hillcrest, with 24 ball-and-burlap apple trees and 36 blueberries. The goal is to promote better access to food, greenspace, shade, community pride and jobs.
2 thoughts on “In photos: Hillcrest get an organic boost from GreenWorks”
What is missing in the reporting, or missing in reality, is the involvement of the housing authority, its staff, resources, budget, and leadership, on issues of Green and sustainability. As much as it’s nice to see outsiders like GreenWorks helping out, the media needs to hold the Housing Authority accountable to sprucing up all the property it owns across Metro Asheville. That means these reporters need to know who Gene Bell and David Nash, and what Mayor Mannheim expects from the housing authority board of commissioners that she appoints, and the appointees made by previous mayors.
The housing authority is run by the feds, and consequently these people that run it think they are totally autonomous
from the citizen taxpayers of Asheville…These housing people are arrogant and smarmy toward the city and city council
and city manager REFUSES to make them more accountable…