SI White
div style="clear: both; height: 2em;"> 

Solutions for Food Security: Urban Food Hubs

Date:
Monday, November 6, 2017
Time:
6:30 PM - 8:00 PM
Location:
Q?rius Theater
Ground floor, National Museum of Natural History
10th St. and Constitution Ave. N.W.
Washington, DC 20560
United States
  Sabine-Ohara-cropped.jpg


  Image credit: Smithsonian Institution

Join Sabine O’Hara, Dean of the College of Agriculture, Urban Sustainability and Environmental Sciences (CAUSES) and Landgrant Programs of the University of the District of Columbia, as she explores the question: can cities contribute to food security and nutritional security? 

To answer this question, O’Hara is looking vertically, as well as horizontally, for farming solutions that generate high yields from small urban spaces. Rather than growing in size, these urban food security solutions grow in number, and re-envision our food system as a network of decentralized, small scale, highly productive food hubs even in the midst of urban neighborhoods. These Urban Food Hub consist of four integrated components that address the whole value chain of food: food production, food preparation, food distribution, and waste and water recovery. 

O’Hara will review four emerging Urban Food Hub locations in Washington DC and explore the connections between urban farming, food security, nutritional security, and the sustainability and resilience of our cities.  

This program is presented with Resources for the Future as part of the Anthropocene: Life in the Age of Humans series. To see more programs, visit the Anthropocene: Life in the Age of Humans homepage.

We're sorry, the deadline for registering for this event has passed.