2024 Project: A Non-Profit Food Garden in Paris

Studying the impact of a food garden on health and the environment

Sharing the benefits of the food garden with vulnerable elderly people, and studying its impact on health and the environment 

The pilot project consists in setting up a productive food garden on the roof/terrace of the Annie Girardot nursing home in Paris, directly integrated into the living environment.

The aim is to share the benefits of food gardening with dependant, elderly residents, with a particular focus on those suffering from Alzheimer's disease, and to highlight the impact in terms of health and the environment.

The project involves the implementation of four key actions:

✔ seasonal events around vegetables and berries 

✔ a free, healthy food source

✔ an improved living environment

✔ a concrete and visible ecological action 

These actions make it possible to study the impact of the food garden on both health and the environment. The results of the study are disseminated to the population and public authorities, in order to contribute to a better understanding of the benefits of the food garden for society as a whole.

Live, interactive Map of the Food Garden (you can zoom in and out, move around, and click on garden elements)

Monthly Seasonal Events Around Vegetables and Berries

The non-profit food garden creates a variety of activities around the seasonal life of the vegetable garden, and around the vegetables and berries produced on site. Residents are invited to participate in the planting and gardening activities, and to harvest and eat the vegetables and berries. They are also invited to collect and return all their organic waste for recycling into growing media, which engages them in a supportive and collective approach to resource and waste management. Participants feel responsible for their local food production, and proud to produce fruit and vegetables for dependent or frail residents, as part of a supportive and responsible approach to food.

Free, Healthy Food

The non-profit food garden produces a healthy diet based on vegetables and berries, without the use of chemical fertilizers or pesticides. Residents with access to this abundant food source are naturally led to eat more natural, unprocessed food, and less chemical or processed food. The concept is innovative in that it makes it possible to produce free food, in large quantities, entirely from locally recycled organic materials. This demonetization of a part of residents' food supply is a precious help in a context of supermarket food price inflation, and reconnects residents with the direct source of their food and its organic components (seeds, compost, water, air, sun).


Improved Living Environment

The non-profit food garden improves the living environment for residents. Indeed, the presence of a rooftop vegetable garden changes the place, neighborhood, making it greener, livelier, more natural, even therapeutic. The usefulness and social ties that are established improve the living environment by giving it greater meaning. Last but not least, achieving greater food autonomy reduces residents' stress by eliminating anxieties linked to food price inflation, or dependence on supply chains. A resilient place is naturally more serene and pleasant to live in when the going gets tough.

Concrete, Visible Ecological Action

The non-profit food garden offers a way to act together, concretely and simply, to protect the planet:


Pilot Site in Paris

We carried out a technical and functional pre-diagnosis in 3 nursing residences in the 13th arrondissement of Paris, and the Annie Girardot retirement residence presented the best conditions, as several roof and terrace areas are already accessible and secure, which significantly reduces the investment requirements linked to the initial installation, and the residence is particularly well-suited to developing high-impact activities around recycling, the life of the food garden, and the use of the vegetables and berries produced.



Provisional Roadmap

Food Garden Project Charter

The Gardens4Good organization

The garden is managed by the Gardens4Good organization, a non-profit association. Click here to read a presentation of the association, its mission, values and leadership team.

The Annie Girardot Nursing Home in Paris

Located in Paris, France, in the heart of an eco-neighborhood, the Annie Girardot nursing home is adjacent to a public garden and a protected biodiversity zone. Managed by the Direction of the Solidarity of the Paris City, it offers 100 single rooms for vulnerable elderly people, and provides specialized support for people suffering from Alzheimer's disease or related disorders.