Community Garden
A Sense of Community and Environmental Awareness
Garden Overview
The Lafayette Square Community Garden, created in 1997 at the corner of Park and Dolman Avenues in Lafayette Square, provides a site for residents to grow fresh healthy foods, fresh flowers, and herbs in the company of friends and neighbors. It stimulates interest in gardening and promotes a sense of community and environmental awareness. Gardeners have grown a multitude of vegetables, herbs and annual and perennial flowers; there have been paper makers, natural dye makers and herbalists give demonstrations. Whatever your interests, we welcome you to join us on a first come, first served basis.
The Community Garden was purchased and placed in the Gateway Greening Land Trust in 2008. The Lafayette Square Garden was the first in St. Louis to enter into this type of agreement. In 2013, adjacent land to the north was also purchased and placed in the Gateway Greening Land Trust.
As part of this cooperation with the Land Trust, we made these agreements:
- allow the lots to remain a community garden
- maintain the beauty of that corner
- increase the number of beds
- replace the wooden fence with iron fencing in accordance with the Lafayette Square Historic Code
- make space available for all to enjoy when gardening or socializing
The Main Garden is located at 1701-1707 Park Avenue. The North Garden is located at 1319 Dolman Avenue.
To request a plot in the Community Garden you can email us at garden@lafayettesquare.org

Request a Bed
How do I request a garden bed?
Email garden@lafayettesquare.org with your name, home address and phone number.
Once you are assigned a bed, you will need to do the following—
- Pay the $25 annual bed fee.
- Be a member in good standing of the neighborhood association (Lafayette Square Restoration Committee). Memberships start at $35 per person.
- Sign the Community Garden Agreement
- Perform work to maintain the common areas of the garden during work days and throughout the gardening season. This consists of weeding, mulching, trimming, pruning, painting, and replacing boards on beds. You will meet a lot of passionate and knowledgeable gardeners as you work in the garden.
How does my garden get watered?
The main garden’s irrigation system runs on a timed schedule and bed owners may also water as needed. Beds in the North garden need to be watered by owners.
Garden Bed Rules
Once you have a bed, it is yours to plant whatever you desire, but you need to weed and maintain it. The bed does not have to be impeccable, but it should be something you are proud of and be actively gardening for the season. We prefer you don’t plant invasive species like mint or raspberries, but they can be confined to a pot in the ground.
Sprawling veggies like pumpkins, cukes, zucchini, squash, and melons are permissible as long as they are kept within the confines of your bed. We recommend that you build a trellis and grow these types of plants vertically.
Garden History
by Linda Weiner and Steve Fliesler*
The story of the Lafayette Square community garden is intimately tied to the redevelopment of the Lafayette Square neighborhood of St. Louis, Missouri. Lafayette Square enjoyed its heyday during the 1870’s and 1880’s as the “Beverly Hills” of rich merchants and traders who had made their fortune along the Mississippi River. It is home to Lafayette Park, the first public park in the United States west of the Mississippi, then and now a focal point of the neighborhood. In 1896, a tornado ravaged the community and triggered a westward move of the elite. The stately Victorian homes slowly became dilapidated and abandoned as the inner city of St. Louis engulfed them, while suburbia sprawled further west. In the early 1970’s, a few daring people envisioned the restoration of the neighborhood. Three-story remnant homes (“shells”) could be bought for as little as a thousand dollars and were fully rehabbed over the years by successive waves of restorationists. By the year 2000, nearly all of the homes around the central park and surrounding three-block radius were fully restored.
As part of the revitalization, avid gardeners and others volunteered to beautify the neighborhood by restoring Lafayette Park, including its park house, grotto around the pond, and its rock garden on the West side of the Park. The gardeners began spreading their “green revolution” around the neighborhood, transforming abandoned lots into orchards and native grasslands. In 1997, this boundless band of agrarians decided to build a community vegetable garden, embracing the dream that, one day, they would sink their teeth into firm, juicy homegrown tomatoes and pick fresh basil, oregano, and other herbs right in their own neighborhood. Word spread like wildfire and a core group of 14 gardeners, comprising a diversity of race, gender, and sexual orientation, met, decided on the site, drew plans, and wrote a variety of grants to Gateway Greening, Operation Brightside, and the St. Louis Regional Arts Council and also raised private donations. The grants were approved (a total sum of $20,000), the plans were approved by the Lafayette Square Restoration Committee (LSRC, the neighborhood organization), and the garden was set to be built.
On a brisk day in March of 1997, the materials were delivered and these fearless gardeners marched onto the then eastern edge of the neighborhood, beyond which were sites of urban decay: the haunting shadow of the abandoned old City Hospital, the high-rise public housing projects, and many weed-ridden, garbage-strewn abandoned lots. The chosen lot at the corner of Park Avenue and Dolman stood empty, awaiting its makeover. In one weekend, 19 garden beds were built and filled with composted soil provided by the city.
Each weekend for six consecutive weeks, a new task was accomplished under the relentless leadership of Linda Weiner whose early Saturday morning phone calls were the dreaded bugle call to work. A picket fence was erected over the course of two weekends and stained the next. The post holes for the fence were particularly difficult to dig, because the stone foundation of a building that previously stood on the lot interfered. A 175-foot long perennial border was planted with donations from the Missouri Botanical Garden and Gateway Greening’s “Great Perennial Divide.” A brick patio was built as the next step, and the construction of a pergola was contracted to local carpenters Paul Iskovich, of Lafayette Square, and his business partner in M&I Woodworking. They also built benches overlooking the garden. Finally, an herb garden was established around the perimeter of the brick patio, using herb plants donated by the Webster Groves Herb Society. It’s a wonder any gardener had time to plant his or her own vegetables! However, by late August of 1997, the gardeners did celebrate the fruits of their labor at a wonderful garden party, to which the rest of the community was invited to share in the delight of this new oasis in the neighborhood.
Subsequently, additions and improvements to the Lafayette Square community garden were made. In 1999, local artist Andy Cross, noted scenic artist for the St. Louis Muny Opera Company and also a gardener from another St. Louis neighborhood community garden, was commissioned to paint a mural depicting a Victorian garden scene on the wall of the building immediately adjacent to the garden on its western border. Paints and materials were purchased with a $2,500 grant from the St. Louis Regional Arts Council, as well as additional donations from Ameren UE, neighborhood businesses and individuals. This beautiful mural now serves as the backdrop to the brick patio and pergola. A cutting flower garden was added along the lawn area. Four additional beds were added in 2004 by Roy Peterson, one of the founders of the garden. An adjacent, grassy field just north of the community garden was planted with fruit trees largely due to the efforts of David “Kingpin” Bown, transforming the once barren lot into a flourishing community orchard. Now termed “The North Garden,” several new beds were added there, and in 2013 the lot became an official part of the community garden. In 2016 another five beds were added to the main garden. There are currently 46 beds between the two gardens. When new home construction near The North Garden required demolition of fruit trees, the new owners agreed to plant a new row of fruit trees nearby to replace those that were removed.
In January, 2008, the Lafayette Square Community Garden was purchased from the St. Louis City Land Reulitization Authority and placed in trust with the Gateway Greening Land Trust. It will be kept as a garden maintained by the community of Lafayette Square in perpetuity as long as it is well maintained. In 2013 The North Garden parcel was added to the Land Trust.
Over the years, the Lafayette Square community garden has garnered numerous awards and recognition. In 1999, it won First Place in the Gateway Greening Urban Garden Contest, as well as an Honorable Mention for the watering system design (the brainchild of Paul Sauer, then LSRC President). The garden received an Honorable Mention in 1999 and Third Place in 2000 in the St. Louis Post-Dispatch Great Garden Contest, for Best Garden. Subsequent awards have included First Place (2001), Third Place (2003), Second Place (2004), and Honorable Mention (2006) in Gateway Greening’s Urban Garden Contests, for Established Community Garden; and Third Place (2004) for Best Scarecrow in the Gateway Greening Urban Garden Contest. In addition, the garden was one of five gardens mentioned in an article on endangered urban gardens in Fine Gardening Magazine (notably featuring Rosalie Truong, a founding member of the Lafayette Square community garden). The garden also was a designated stop on the 2004 Statewide Master Gardener’s Annual Meeting Tour, and on the 2005 Missouri Botanical House Garden Members’ Tour, and is an annual destination for the Lafayette Square Spring Home and Garden Tour.
Today, the Lafayette Square Community Garden stands as a gem on the eastern boundary of the neighborhood, a further testament to the energy, vision, and commitment that helped to restore the beauty, grandeur, and vitality of a once nearly vanquished neighborhood.
*contributions to the story by Rosalie Truong, Jim McCarter, Kim Peterson, Sue Pinker-Dodd
Last updated 8/24/2018
A rich history.
Lafayette Square is one of St. Louis’s most vibrant historic neighborhoods, known for its restored Victorian homes and Lafayette Park, the city’s oldest public park, established in 1836. Once a post–Civil War enclave for St. Louis’s elite, the area declined after the 1896 tornado but was revitalized beginning in the 1970s when residents launched preservation efforts. Designated the city’s first historic district in 1972, Lafayette Square today blends architectural beauty, community spirit and a deep connection to St. Louis’s past.
