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Montreal program letting residents plant sidewalk gardens provides numerous benefits
MONTREAL — On a quiet residential corner of Montreal’s St-Henri neighbourhood, plots of dirt carved out of the sidewalk, each hosting a solitary tree, have become verdant oases along the city block.
Through a free borough-run program that allows residents to adopt sidewalk tree plantings, local tenants have turned several of the roughly two-square-metre parcels into their own small gardens, some of them now bursting with daisies and hosta.
Just in its second year of operation, the program has been a catalyst for numerous social, environmental and commercial benefits, residents say.
And its popularity is growing. In 2022, Montreal’s Southwest borough, which includes St-Henri, counted 253 participants and 407 adopted squares. So far in 2023, there are 411 participants caring for 613 squares, according to Marie-Joëlle Fluet, the borough official who co-ordinates the program.