Think Phood, Not Food!

This Netherlands-based social enterprise is raising the wellness & sustainability bar.

A young man pushing a wheelbarrow on an allotment.

(Air Images / Shutterstock.com)

Phood is a green-minded urban farm and social enterprise with impressive ambitions focusing on optimizing ecological and social impact, as its website outlines.

Based in Eindhoven, in the southern region of the Netherlands, the Phood Community Farming project, which started life as a food truck serving nutritious meals, today cultivates healthy produce sustainably, and simultaneously helps individuals facing challenges in society. It does this by equipping them with the tools needed to “navigate adversity” and even turn it into something positive. This dual purpose is detailed in an article on Phood’s journey on the website of the Rabo Foundation. This supporter is working to drive positive social, economic and ecological change for a fair and sustainable society.

Phood’s social change remit is also brought out by Hactivist Guide. In its words: “The organisation’s philosophy focuses on restoring connections between the city, nature and people. They aim to transform food production from a service offer to a platform for personal engagement.” It underlines how Phood focuses on accessible community education, and on the shift in perspective gained by the experience of working with nature.

 
 
 
 
 
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Bringing diversity back into nature
At the Phood Farm Picking Garden in Eindhoven, members of the public are invited to garden together with nature as community farmers. An affordable annual subscription lets them pick their own vegetables, and enjoy deep discounts in the Phood Farm shop, which also sells indoor products such as microgreens, mushrooms, kombucha and oils.

As they farm and harvest seasonal vegetables, fruits and flowers outdoors and indoors at its 1.5-acre plot, Phood  believes that local participants are also playing their part in a sustainable and more social future. 

The goal is the creation of a hyperlocal, self-sustaining ecosystem that harmonizes human activity with nature, restoring rather than depleting it, as Bright Vibes reports.

Community farmers are taught about permaculture and aquaponics, and practice greening the city together as they work on the land in an ecological, regenerative way.  Participants are encouraged to learn from each other through tutorials, workshops, and simple recipes. 

A people-nurturing agenda
This organization cares as much about the sustainable growth of its people as it does for the sustainable growth of the plants everyone cultivates.  Beyond growing a diverse range of chemical-free fruits, vegetables, herbs, and honey, Phood Farm is a vibrant community hub encouraging education, collaboration, and innovation.

Deconstructing its “Phood Care” philosophy, Phood’s website proclaims that “In addition to health and sustainability, caring for each other and each other’s well-being is a major focus within Phood Farm.”

Phood emphasizes that this public participation in their endeavour generates growth through more work and learning opportunities for youth who find it difficult to find their employment niche, or as they put it: “young people distant from the labor market.”

 
 
 
 
 
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Explaining this process in more detail, Phood Farm emphasizes its outreach work with people who are less integrated into the local community and face barriers to employment due to conditions like autism, ADHD, or burnout: “Phood Farm works with people who,for whatever reason, do not fully participate in society. This includes temporary absence from work to long-term difficulty participating in our often fast-paced and stimulating society. While working with our products, we simultaneously work on our own development!”

How does the organization nurture the people who cultivate plants with them? The answer lies in its welcoming and calm work environment, where all are given space to grow. A dedicated staff of work supervisors with psychology backgrounds, experience of encouraging teams, and even in coaching Tai Chi Chi Kung help make this possible. 

As co-founder, Tim Elfring explains, Tai Chi teaches powerful yet simple principles and exercises that can help individuals thrive in our often chaotic and harsh society.

Crucially, Phood Farm grasps that growth has its own rhythm. Offering an analogy with the growth of a plant that needs protection, rest, and much light and water, its staff grasp that members of the community have varying needs that need to be met  to help them flourish optimally. These can take in everything from encouragement to a pressure-free space, and opportunities for further development through work experience placements, internships or skill-boosting daytime activities. The tangible growth in self-confidence of many of the participants is something reported by the staff. 

Looking ahead, the organization hopes to establish a permanent food location nearby in which to grow leafy greens for local households and restaurants, employ more young people, and assist other cities in developing urban farms.

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