Operations
Citywide Operations
We keep plants alive in difficult locations by organizing routes, watering, and care to work within the real limits of heat, pavement, distance, and tight budgets.
Rising heat and quicker soil drying shape when crews can reach a site and how long water will hold in the soil. Many locations sit on pavement, face heavy compaction, or rely on limited hydrant access, which narrows the options for when and how we can water. Containers, beds, and tree pits are spread across boroughs, so hot days stretch labor, vehicle time, and fuel in ways that require careful routing and coordination.
We build mobile watering routes around plant type, sun and wind exposure, and container volume, then adjust timing as weather and site conditions change. We use self-watering inserts, fire hydrants, hoses, soil blends, and modular planters to hold moisture where no irrigation lines exist. Crews and managers identify problems, test practical fixes, and turn proven approaches into routine guidance for training, purchasing, routing, and vendor work.
New Yorkers see their community’s plantings hold up through heat, dry spells, and the wear of city life. Partners notice steady results in tough locations and gain confidence that plantings can take root and last. Our operational approach manages scattered sites as part of a coordinated, comprehensive system that performs reliably across seasons and communities.
Citywide Operations
We manage the day-to-day work that keeps plants alive in urban spaces without the soil, water, or staffing most landscapes rely on. By coordinating the watering, soil work, and crew training, we keep plantings alive across five boroughs and able to endure the city’s toughest sites.
Learn moreWatering Operations
We must operate a watering system that keeps plants alive through the hottest, driest conditions using limited labor, fuel, and funding—especially in areas without irrigation or dedicated maintenance.
Many of these sites rely entirely on trucked water. Containers and small beds dry quickly under full sun, wind, reflected heat, and pavement exposure, especially in streetscapes and plazas. Traffic, construction activity, and summer heat strain labor, vehicles, and fuel.
We build routes around plant needs, exposure, and container volume. Trucks carry large tanks so crews can service multiple sites in one run, and schedules shift so the most exposed locations receive more frequent visits during heat waves and establishment periods. We use soil mixes and mulch to slow surface evaporation. Self-watering inserts create a hidden reservoir inside planters so roots can draw moisture between visits. Our teams log volumes, stress signs, and timing. This information informs our route planning, soil blends, and plant selection.
Residents, students, and tenants experience greenery that stays healthy through tough conditions. Partners start to see streetscapes, plazas, and other difficult sites as realistic places for lasting and vibrant plantings.
Watering Operations
We run a flexible watering system that keeps plants alive in places without irrigation. Trucks, routes, fire hydrants, hoses, soil mixes, self-watering inserts, and careful plant choices let us keep beds, planters, and tree pits from drying out in heat, wind, or long gaps between visits.
Learn moreField Testing
We treat environmental, financial, and bureaucratic limits as prompts to design methods that make horticulture possible in places most people consider “unplantable”.
We build experimentation into daily work so crews can name problems, test fixes, and see what holds up over time. Watering challenges lead to mobile routes, self-watering inserts, and drought-tolerant mixes that ease pressure on staff, vehicles, and fuel. Soil issues are tested with tailored blends, raised beds, modular habitat kits, and compost-return systems that make ecological work possible in tight or paved spaces. We also test plant selections, including how annuals, perennials, and pollinator-focused mixes perform in different sites, then move the strongest combinations into standards, manuals, and training. As these practices spread, residents and trainees see real solutions in the ground and landscapes stay more stable under stress.
Field Testing
Out in the field, we make horticulture work in places that lack soil, water access, steady funding, or clear rules. We treat those limits as starting points for problem-solving and turn them into practical methods that crews, partners, and trainees can use in their daily work across the city.
Learn more