News and updates
Local Food
Youth
The Food Project's nationally recognized approach to leadership development combines agriculture, enterprise, and service to create a rigorous, practical, and integrated experience. As young people move through Seed Crew (summer), Dirt Crew (academic season), and Root...
Gardens
Want to grow your own food—right in your yard? The Food Project believes that everyone who wants to grow their own food should have access to adequate, toxin-free growing space. To this end, we have built more than 1,800 raised-bed gardens through our Build-a-Garden...

Carole Kasper Elected to Lead Trustees
At its Annual Meeting, held in September at the Dudley Greenhouse, The Food Project elected Carole Kasper to be the new Chair of its 21-member Board of Trustees.
Nearly $200,000 to benefit Lynn residents
In Lynn, where we have operated since 2005, we manage 1.5 acres of urban farmland and engage approximately sixty teens every year in our three-tiered youth development approach.
Community, Memory, and Peace in the Dudley Greenhouse
Talibah Kennedy and Peaches Jackson are two volunteers and community members of the Dudley Greenhouse. Read about what brought them to the growing space, and what keeps them coming back.
Alumni Corner: Ken Lopez
The Alumni Engagement Sector of our Fellowship program spoke with activist, therapist-in-training, and alumni Ken Lopez about their time at the organization along with current work and upcoming projects.
Announcing our Interim Executive Director, Jonathan Rosenthal
Seed Crew Clears the Way for Raised Garden Beds at Oasis on Ballou Farm
In July, The Food Project partnered with the Oasis on Ballou farm in Boston, an urban agriculture project led by farmer Apolo Cátala in the Codman Square neighborhood of Dorchester. Read on to learn more about this special collaboration.Â
Alumni Corner: sibling stories
Who is Jonathan Rosenthal, Interim Executive Director?
With decades of experience in the food industry, globally and locally, Jonathan finds TFP’s cross-generational racial justice model to be deeply inspiring. He looks forward to “bringing people together across identity and class through agriculture.”
Persevering during a drought
2022 was an extremely challenging growing season. Climate realities continue to threaten farms and farm workers through hotter and longer droughts…