Garibaldi Street Garden


Transforming a Grimsby car park


Community groups are taking a grassroots approach to growing fresh food in a Grimsby neighbourhood at a time of rapidly rising food prices!

Groups in the town’s East Marsh community are are set to create a new urban orchard and community garden in the Garibaldi Street Car Park in Grimsby.

The site will become a social and education for local people, as well as serving as a new communal green space.

An £85,000 grant from the DLUHC will help the North East Lincolnshire Council to plant trees at the Albion Street Playground, and community groups to create the new community garden on part of the underused Garibaldi Street car park.

Mary Vickers, Community Food Co-ordinator in North East Lincolnshire, is working with The Salvation Army, St Andrew’s Church, the Rock Foundation, the Fisherman’s Mission and other local community groups to set up the new garden.

An edible garden

Planting areas, raised beds, pathways and fencing will be in place by the end of March – watch this space for updates!

North East Lincolnshire Council is planting 35 fruit trees in the community garden and a selection of other trees on land next to Albion Street playground.

As well as fruit trees, the community garden team plan on planting bushes for soft fruits, potatoes, carrots, salad, herbs and brassicas, such as cauliflower and cabbage.

Grow, Cook, Share

Encouraging people to grow, prepare and cook their own food is one of the main drivers behind the project.

The Salvation Army building, opposite the car park, has a new community training kitchen where there are facilities to teach people cooking skills.

Photo: Henry Kenyon

Food grown in the community garden will provide a steady supply of produce for the local community and the kitchen as well as local food banks and other community food providers.

This will give people the opportunity to plant, grow, pick, and cook their own food all within a few metres of the garden – and maybe occasionally eat together too.

#CommunityGrowingNEL

Our board member, Mary Vickers, is the Community Food Co-ordinator in North East Lincolnshire. Mary explains:

“Part of my work as Community Food Co-ordinator is to help our variety of local community food providers (food banks and hot food kitchens) to work together and collaborate as often as they can.

Another important aspect of my role is to encourage and support projects which help individuals and communities to move away from reliance on free food parcels.

This exciting project works with both aims at the same time.

Providing an opportunity for people to learn to grow at least some of their own food is immensely valuable.

Simply working together in the open air is known to increase wellbeing.

Adding this to the provision of practical growing and cooking skills can greatly increase both individual and community resilience.

It can also be fun!

An added aspect here is the range of different community groups who wish to be involved, all of whom will bring their own dimension to the project, as well as enabling wider involvement into as yet unreached groups within the local area.

We have a working title for all the community growing projects in North East
Lincolnshire – #CommunityGrowingNEL. This highlights that communities who grow things together also grow together themselves.”

Mary Vickers, Community Food Co-ordinator in North East Lincolnshire and Food Partnership Board Member
Photo: Henry Kenyon

“This project will provide many things, not only fresh produce for people who are struggling with the cost of living and reliant on food banks, but a peaceful place where people can sit among the trees in East Marsh, enjoy a picnic and view the dock tower. 

As a church and charity, part of our mission is ‘care for creation’, the idea of protecting and caring for our planet.

The creation of this garden represents all that is good in our community, encouraging green space and providing a basis on which happiness, health, and friendship can be built and where every person can play a part and contribute.

It will be somewhere that children and older people can work and rest together with dignity, where those who plant can harvest, cook and eat their produce.

The Salvation Army recently reopened its church and community centre in East Marsh where we have a thriving coffee shop and programme of activities.

There’s a real energy about the place at the moment and this community garden will only add to that.” 

Major Alison Gardner, church leader at Grimsby Salvation Army
Alison Gardner + Mary Vickers, Garibaldi Street Car Park

“By transforming part of this underused car park into a vibrant, community garden, the groups involved can create a new, much-needed green space.

This project was earmarked for funding by the government because of the lack of greenery in the area and the levels of deprivation.

From improving physical and mental wellbeing to providing an educational activity and a source of fresh produce, the new community garden is hugely beneficial for people in the area.”

Cllr Stewart Swinburn, portfolio holder for environment and transport at North East Lincolnshire Council


How you can help

The team behind this project are appealing for volunteers to help prepare and plant the garden.

They also need: water butts, wood chip, compost and topsoil.

If you can help, and want further information about the project, please contact:


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