A Barley Field Grows on Soviet Concrete

Andrea Tamm and Ann Press, Tallinn. 
20 November 2016

Many voices. Greener cities. Better cities.

In the summer of 2016, the largest Soviet-era residential area of Estonia was living a new life. The district Lasnamäe, including Estonia’s capital city, Tallinn, was built in the late 70s, but it has fallen into stagnation. Little has changed since its inception, and those big plans are still unfinished. A vast traffic channel to the city center is waiting for a planned-but-never-built central tramway. The road, the bridges, and the stairways-to-nowhere are completed, desperately waiting for the tram.

The installation of a barley field where a planned tramway lays empty reminds us of the cycles of nature and life.

This summer, Lasnamäe’s urban plan got a new mid-term solution: I and another young designer planted a barley field on the unused stairs in the middle of the highway. Ann Press and I are both practicing interior architects and Master’s degree students at the Estonian Academy of Arts’ Interior Architecture Department. What started off as schoolwork for us grew into a significant urban installation.

The idea of a barley field installation came from history—barley was the earliest crop grown in Estonia and was grown in the area of Lasnamäe in circa 500-600 BC. Because the culture of barley growing was brought to Estonia from Russia, and the tramway stairs mark the border between Estonian- and Russian-speaking districts, the art installation carried an idea of integration for us. The aim of the barley field was to bring some contrasting softness, some life and progress to this industrial area, but also to encourage the locals to take steps towards changing their living environment, instead of waiting for the authorities to do it, given that the tram has still not arrived after over 40 years.

This project was founded by a crowdfunding campaign, built and cut with the help of volunteers. The soil—45 tons of it—was carried on the stairs bucket by bucket. By the end of September, the crop was ripe and we held a harvesting party for the stair-field.

We made the harvested crop a gift for the crowdfunders; some if it is now living a new life as jewelry, while some of it was taken to a laboratory for tests that will calculate air pollution levels of the area.

Throughout the summer, the stairs of barley offered the district a new puff of life—young, verdant seedlings growing and turning into a ripe yellow barley field, reminding us of the cycles of nature and life.

3-by-hendrik-osula
The installation begins. Photo: Hendrik Osula
4-by-markus-tamm
Spring 2016. Photo: Markus Tamm
8-by-tonu-tunnel
Late Summer 2016. Photo by Tõnu Tunnel / www.tonutunnel.com
LasnaViljaMäe lõikuspidu
Photo: Madis Veltman
LasnaViljaMäe lõikuspidu
Photo: Madis Veltman

Thus far, the locals  and the media have given us only positive feedback, which is the most important thing; some of the residents of Lasnamäe have even contacted us to ask how to get the permissions to build their community gardens in Lasnamäe. And this was what our art installation was aiming for—to encourage people to make changes in their district themselves, not to wait for a tram that has not still arrived for 40 years.

Andrea Tamm & Ann Press
Tallinn, Estonia

On The Nature of Cities

Andrea Tamm and Ann Press

About the Writer:
Andrea Tamm and Ann Press

Andrea Tamm and Ann Press are second year Master's students in interior architecture at the Estonian Academy of Arts, but they have been working as interior architects for several years (Andrea for 5, Ann for 10). Their installation of a barley field on a set of "Soviet stairs to nowhere" is their debut as "farmers".

Andrea Tamm and Ann Press

Andrea Tamm and Ann Press

Andrea Tamm and Ann Press are second year Master's students in interior architecture at the Estonian Academy of Arts, but they have been working as interior architects for several years (Andrea for 5, Ann for 10). Their installation of a barley field on a set of "Soviet stairs to nowhere" is their debut as "farmers".

4 thoughts on “A Barley Field Grows on Soviet Concrete

  1. A barley field growing on Soviet concrete is a powerful symbol of nature’s resilience and the potential for beauty in unexpected places. This juxtaposition of nature and man-made structures reminds us of the enduring strength and adaptability of life

  2. Wonderful story. Great to see the power of regeneration. What a fantastic green bridge they have created. I wondered if creating a wildflower meadow instead would have been even greater contribution to urban green infrastructure?
    Ingo Schuder, Oxfordshire, UK

  3. Awesome! This is a fantastic example of thinking outside of the box and using available space in a create and thought provoking way.

    Would clover do well there? That would be awesome to look at as well as adding nitrogen to the soil being used. Sunflowers would be amazing looking as well.

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