Tag Archive | New City Farm

Southeast Area Farmers Market Saturday July 26 at Joe Taylor Park

This Saturday July 26, come visit the Southeast Area Farmers’ Market for a wide variety of local produce, cottage kitchen foods, personal care items, crafts and ready-to-eat foods. The market accepts most food assistance programs. New City Farm, a program of New City Neighbors, is this year’s market produce anchor. You’ll love their fresh, chemical-free produce!

Here are the 2025 market dates:

August 9 & 23

September 6 & 20

October 4 & 18

Nov. 1 & 15

The 2025 market is a collaboration among OKT, New City Farm, and Baxter Community Center.

Southeast Area Farmers Market opens July 12

The Southeast Area Farmers’ Market provides a wide variety of local produce, cottage kitchen foods, personal care items, crafts and ready-to-eat foods. Our vendors are primarily women of color, home growers and residents of OKT’s targeted neighborhoods. In addition to providing access to healthy food, the market hosts meal preparation activities, workshops and guests from community organizations. The market accepts most food assistance programs.

Welcome produce anchor New City Farm
New City Farm, a program of New City Neighbors, empowers youth through hands-on learning. The Farm grows on over four acres across three locations: a one-acre urban farm at 1115 Leonard St. NE; as partners with Grand Valley State University’s sustainability department on the Allendale campus; and two leased two acres at Plainsong Farm & Ministry in Rockford, MI. New City Farm will sell their fresh local produce at every Southeast Area Farmers Market this season. Produce not sold will be donated to Baxter Community Center’s Marketplace.

Welcome Baxter Community Center

OKT is thrilled to welcome Baxter Community Center as a partner in this year’s Southeast Area Farmers Market. Over the years, OKT has collaborated with Baxter on community events, bulk food orders, and healthy eating and cooking classes. In addition other its Marketplace, Baxter offers medical and dental services, a Child Development Center, and youth and adult programming.

Welcome Vendors!
If you would like to become a vendor, email SEAFM@OKTjustice.org for a Vendor Application Packet.

Welcome Community Organizations!
Schedule a date to table at the market and share your resources with our patrons.

The  Southeast Farmers Market is managed by Our Kitchen Table. Contact market manager Belinda Hendersen at SEAFM@OKTjustice.org.

Educating Teens About Food and the Farm Through New City Neighbors

Note! New City Farm will be our produce anchor at this year’s Southeast Area Farmers Market! Reposted from Rapid Growth Media.

This article is part of Rapid Growth’s Voices of Youth series, which features content created by Kent County youth in partnership with Rapid Growth staff mentors, as well as feature stories by adult writers that examine issues of importance to local youth. 

Learning about nutrition, cooking, and food scarcity helps prepare youth for adult life and deepens their empathy. New City Neighbors, a Grand Rapids-based nonprofit, gives area teens that head start and connects them with impactful experiences. 

With three farms across the area and a cafe to serve the community, kids learn agricultural skills and make food alongside their peers. Helping urban youth learn about agricultural development and preservation is key to NCN, which recently secured a five-acre urban space on Ball Avenue NE to expand.

Ricardo Tavárez is in his sixth year as NCN executive director. He hopes more inner-city teens can learn about producing food from farm to table. 

“We take food for granted sometimes, and when our youth learn about food prep or about growing healthy food, they also learn about food scarcity in our community,” he says.

The work at NCN is not just about teaching about these real-world issues, it’s about supplying the community with food to eat — and healthy food, at that. Youth in the NCN program are helping families who need food get farm-to-table meals. 

Nate Engle, of the Michigan Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (MDARD), sees three main benefits to fresh food from the farm being supplied to neighborhoods: economic impact, health benefits, and social aspect. 

“We are what we eat, and if we eat more healthy foods, more often, chances are we’re comparatively healthier,” he says.  

Recognizing how economic impact and social aspects intersect is also important. 

“There’s a higher chance you know the person who delivers those fresh foods or knows the person that grows them, or you get them and then take them to your grandma or an elderly neighbor,” he says. “Food systems that are more local in nature strengthen local communities by building relationships.”

In essence, NCN empowers teens to create better relationships with their community. Tavárez agrees. 

“Being able to bring healthy food to someone helps them build a relationship with the farmers who are actually growing the food,” he said.” There’s not a third party that’s selling them the food. They actually get to interact with the people who grew it.” 

Why New City Neighbors is Youth-Oriented

Part of NCN’s mission is “empowering youth to reach their full potential.” 

“We intentionally focus on youth because we believe that they’re not just the leaders of tomorrow, but they’re the leaders of today,” Tavárez says.

With the right resources, he says, youth can enact change.

“We believe that youth in our neighborhood have ideas that are worth listening to; that they can shape the community for the better; and that they often know more about the social issues that need to be changed in our community than we do. So we want to empower them to have a good starting place to tackle some of those issues and shape our community for the better,” he says.

Engle elaborates on how programs like those NCN offers can help the younger generation later in life.

“Agriculture and food also represent a pathway for youth to grow careers,” he says. “Young people can get training and higher education to become chemists, biologists, veterinarians, plant pathologists, soil scientists, agronomists, supply chain and logistics managers, or any number of other professions.”

These are just a few of the career options that benefit from the training that NCN gives its employees, whether they be farm apprentices or cafe workers. These opportunities soon will expand, as the recent purchase of urban farmland allows the organization to reach more inner-city teens and serve more of the community. NCN has already worked with over 200 youth employees, a number that will grow with this new development.

The Future of New City Neighbors

The Ball Avenue farm was only acquired last fall, but the second phase of the organization’s plan is already in motion. 

The “On Solid Ground” campaign is now in its farm-development phase, where donations are used to buy agricultural equipment. By 2026, the goal is to have the space ready for the third phase, where a farm education center will be fully fitted to teach local youth about agriculture in an environmentally sustainable manner.

Tavárez hopes the community is ready for the space to be maintained as one of the last few urban green spaces in the Creston area. 

“We’re very excited to develop [it], keep it green, and use it to take our youth empowerment to the next level,” he says. “We’re hoping to get a lot of excitement and energy from our community to continue supporting us.” 

The benefits of this campaign don’t end there. Engle speaks to how important it is to conserve these spaces, and how Grand Rapids is at the forefront of urban agriculture development.

“Healthy urban places are symbiotic with healthy rural places,” he says. “If you have vibrant cities, you probably have vibrant rural communities outside them. We see challenges when we sprawl with our developments … We want dense urban cities in Michigan, and we want healthy rural cities and villages surrounded by productive farms and forestry land.”

Whether or not you are a teen, you can help NCN and preserve urban agriculture across the city. Engle recommends contacting the Urban Agriculture Committee and asking if you can attend a meeting. The Kent County Agricultural Preservation Board also holds meetings where you can get questions answered.

In addition to donating, you can volunteer at the New City Farm or become a shareholder and receive fresh, farm-grown vegetables. Current opportunities for youth include a farm apprentice program; applications are on NCN’s website

Luke Fann is a sophomore at City High Middle School, where he has been an editor since 2022 and a journalist since 2021 for the school newspaper, The City Voice. He writes about current events and technology. He also enjoys creative writing, especially fantasy and sci-fi. Luke has won several awards for his writing at MSU’s MIPA Summer Journalism Workshop for both Creative Storytelling and the Art of Storytelling.

New City Farm to vend produce at Southeast Area Farmers Market

Our Kitchen Table is thrilled to announce that New City Farm will be selling its fresh local produce as a vendor at the  the Southeast Area Farmers Market during the 2025 market season.

New City Farms’ produce is 100% grown naturally,  hyper local, and offers a large selection. New City Farms’ programs support youth employment for 20 high school students annually. And, it assists young farm professionals in developing entrepreneurial skills while creating a more resilient food system in Grand Rapids.

New City Farm CSA shares available with SNAP


1. Select “Become a Shareholder.”
2. Click on the share size you want to buy.
3. Click on the seasons you want to participate — spring, summer, and/or fall.
4. Click on “EBT Checkout.”
5.  Checkout & register for an account.

You will receive a confirmation email 3-4 weeks before it’s time to pick up your first share at our farmhouse at 1115 Leonard St NE, 49505, located on bus lines 13 & 15.

Using Double Up Food Bucks, and EBT Card food Dollars, you can buy a CSA farm share from New City Farm for half price — and you can pay in advance or pay weekly. Bridge Card holders can sign up at NewCityFarm.org or scan the QR Code in the image below.