2016-2018
Bronx River Foodway

Yanez and Thiesen co-created the innovative concept of foodway, as urban intervention.
A Foodway is a planned corridor of productive landscapes and community-operated spaces.
This particular Foodway was designed as a public engagement layer built on top of the existing Bronx River Greenway master plan linking 26 miles of parks along the Bronx River.
The Bronx River Foodway conceptual design was a collaboration with NYC Parks, The Bronx River Alliance, and local community groups.
The first detailed design was initiated for Concrete Plant Park from a public process that involved hundreds of community members and dozens of community groups.
Concrete Plant Park

Yanez and Thiesen co-created the innovative concept of foodway, as urban intervention.
A Foodway is a planned corridor of productive landscapes and community-operated spaces.
This particular Foodway was designed as a public engagement layer built on top of the existing Bronx River Greenway master plan linking 26 miles of parks along the Bronx River.
The Bronx River Foodway conceptual design was a collaboration with NYC Parks, The Bronx River Alliance, and local community groups.
The first detailed design was initiated for Concrete Plant Park from a public process that involved hundreds of community members and dozens of community groups.
FoodPlaces

[(re)generative platforms]
FoodPlaces is an innovative open-access online platform for planning productive landscapes in underutilized public and civic spaces funded through a USDA Forest Service grant.
FoodPlaces aims to make it ridiculously simple and perfectly acceptable for communities to grow food everywhere–as a new approach to land use in underutilized public and civic spaces. This is part of a larger strategy to grow regenerative human communities that can sustain themselves indefinitely within bioregions.
FoodPlaces demonstrates various design methodology innovations: 1) use of plant species patterns (forms) that open to use across any context; 2) filling spaces (user-defined horizons) entirely with productive, perennial species while defining horizons that must remain empty to avoid conflict; 3) templates that simulate given generic conditions for a typology (patterns) of underutilized spaces in the public domain; 4) a Species Index, a detailed index containing plant profiles that allow the system to ascertain how well a form will fit its context – the site, as represented by the design template; 5) a process to define the specific context further; and, 6) a filtering process that narrows down the list of possible plant species.
FoodPlaces is a functioning prototype that offers several dynamic tools and resources and has the capacity to host an online community of practice.
Although it is functioning nicely, we determined that it needs considerable support and development to reach a sweet spot of potential.