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Garden of Eden: The Most Beautiful Spot in Brooklyn Happens to Be in an Industrial Park (Seriously)

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High levels of arsenic and lead in the soil, a decrepit factory building, a courtyard roofed over with half-rotted plywood and tarpaper, a courtyard paved in concrete—we’ve all heard this Brooklyn story at least once. But surprise, there’s a happy ending for one garden on an industrial block in East Williamsburg.

When FABR Studio + Workshop partners Tom Dalmus, Bretaigne Walliser, and Eli Fernald discovered the skeleton of a 700-square-foot courtyard while remodeling a building for clients, they were able to see beyond the grit. They decided to site their company headquarters in a first-floor studio space (see the interiors today on Remodelista) and—in a genius move—to install steel factory doors to connect their office to a courtyard garden.

The problem? The plan required them to create a courtyard garden from scratch, which required a leap of faith. “We dug up the whole concrete floor—broken slabs and dirt—and removed layers of plywood and tarpaper, and rebuilt a garden wall,” said Bret. “At that point we tested the soil—and it was shockingly high with lead and heavy metal. It was essentially a brown field site.”

The solution? They remediated the dirt below the concrete with ground-up fish bones and fish meal (to render the heavy metals inert) and carted topsoil one wheelbarrow at a time to create a healthy foundation for plants. “It took a week and smelled like low tide for days, but the plants are absolutely thriving,” said Bret.

The result? Magic. Read on and see if you agree:

Photography by Matthew Williams.

“We’ve been building up and layering the palette out there,” said Bret. Potted plants clustered at the edge of a koi pond include tropical caladiums, a decorative orange tree, and a lime tree.
Above: “We’ve been building up and layering the palette out there,” said Bret. Potted plants clustered at the edge of a koi pond include tropical caladiums, a decorative orange tree, and a lime tree.

In a neighborhood where rusting construction cranes and corrugated sheet metal are far more common sights than butterflies and bees, Fabr Studio created an oasis both for themselves and for the next generation of both insects and humans (Bret and Tom are partners in life as well as in work, and have two young children who have named all the fish).

“We dug a drop-level koi pond and lined it with concrete brick, and started with some koi and some goldfish,” said Bret. They reproduced so there are more babies.”
Above: “We dug a drop-level koi pond and lined it with concrete brick, and started with some koi and some goldfish,” said Bret. They reproduced so there are more babies.”

The fish live year-round outdoors. “You can get a little pond warmer with a heater, to create an oxygen hole when it ices over,” said Bret. In the winter when ice on the surface of the pond is thick enough “to ice skate on,” the fish hibernate at the bottom, she said.

In a garden bed anchored by a Japanese black pine tree (at center), purple morning glory vines are trained to grow vertically on a string trellis. Grow your own with our tips: Morning Glory: A Field Guide to Planting, Care & Design.
Above: In a garden bed anchored by a Japanese black pine tree (at center), purple morning glory vines are trained to grow vertically on a string trellis. Grow your own with our tips: Morning Glory: A Field Guide to Planting, Care & Design.

“In the beginning we were worried because we planted two apple trees ad then worried there were no bees because it was an industrial area,” said Bret. “But there was a bar on corner which has a flower garden on the roof—and beehives.”

The bees fly from the roof down to the Fabr Studio garden to drink water and then return to their hives. “They pollinated our apple tree and all the flowers and the tomatoes,” said Bret. “There’s a thriving little bee colony although the rest of the neighborhood is like a wasteland.”

Wisteria, alliums, verbena. Plant the same against a wall.
Above: Wisteria, alliums, verbena. Plant the same against a wall.

“Oh my God, the garden is incredibly therapeutic,” said Bret. “We live about ten minutes away in a loft apartment with our two toddlers. When we were finally able to build this place and have the garden, it was a wonderful opportunity to have space for the kids to come hang out.”

Not shown: plastic inflatable pools, water guns, and the barbecue grill that appear on the weekend. “This garden goes high, it goes low,” said Bret.

On the roof are morning glory vines and trailing juniper.
Above: On the roof are morning glory vines and trailing juniper.

“We’ve been trying to have a little bit of a biodynamic scenario,”  said Bret. “We bought lady bugs to deal with the lacewings.”

fabr studio in brooklyn garden steel factory doors

Above: A wild rose (dug up from Tom’s parents’ Cape Cod garden in Wellfleet) covers the brick wall.

The garden spills into the indoors, where portable desks on wheels can be moved out to make room for events.
Above: The garden spills into the indoors, where portable desks on wheels can be moved out to make room for events.
Bret and Tom, no water guns visible.
Above: Bret and Tom, no water guns visible.

If you’re designing a courtyard garden from scratch (or any kind of urban attempt at nature), see our curated Garden Design 101 guides for tips. If lead, arsenic, or other contaminants are a concern, read more:


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