2024 KOB Community Grant Awardees
Previously known as Small Grants, the Community Grant program is a mainstay KOB program that is run every year. Congratulations to these 15 projects that have been awarded a grant for 2024. Please read below to learn more about the impact these projects have in neighborhoods all around Oakland.
Eastmont Hills Utility Boxes
Project Description: The purpose is to transform utility boxes at neighborhood corners into vibrant pieces of art and incorporating succulent plants. This project aims to enhance the area, deter blight, and combat the Broken Window Theory in East Oakland, inspiring the community to take pride in and care for shared spaces. Local artists will be partnered with to bring this vision to life.
Neighborhood: Eastmont Hills
UNA USA East Bay Chapter and Save the Trees for Oakland
Project Description: The City of Oakland Tree Services has planted trees in several parks, but ongoing maintenance is needed to ensure their survival through the hot and dry summer of 2024. To support this, the UNA East Bay Chapter and Trees for Oakland are partnering to host three monthly events across three parks, focusing on weeding, mulching, and watering to keep the trees healthy and thriving.
Locations: Arroyo Viejo Park, William "Bill" Patterson Park/Brookfield Park, Columbian Gardens Park
Melrose Library Garden Expansion
Project Description: Encouraged by the community's enthusiastic response to the initial rose and medicinal garden investments at the Melrose Branch Library, the project will now expand these gardens and finalize the perimeter landscaping. The roses bring beauty and vibrancy to Foothill Ave, while the medicinal garden supports community programming. Adding native and drought-tolerant plants will enhance the perimeter landscaping, creating a welcoming entrance to the library’s backyard. Completing and maintaining these gardens will foster ongoing community engagement and showcase the historic charm of this Carnegie Library.
Neighborhood: Melrose
Bushrod Park Community Garden
Project Description: The project aims to construct a small greenhouse to distribute seed starts to the community, cultivate our plants, and provide a relaxing garden space for children and adults to enjoy the garden. This initiative will benefit community gardeners and those interested in sustainable growing practices. The greenhouse will enhance public engagement by facilitating the gifting of native plants and vegetables grown from seeds and supporting low-cost gardening, a significant focus within the community.
Neighborhood: Bushrod
Mosswood Community Garden
Project Description: The project will aim to provide fresh foods for public picking and eating, and enhance the sustainability practices of the Mosswood Community Garden. Located in Mosswood Park, this garden is maintained by local volunteers and is part of Oakland's Community Garden Program. The project will replace the original passionfruit vine and plant a new kiwifruit vine, inviting park visitors to pick the fruit growing through the fence. To reduce water usage, the garden will adopt olla clay pots, and improve on-site composting by acquiring a tumbler-style composter to minimize organic waste.
Neighborhood: Mosswood
Project Description: The aim of this project is to enhance the garden in collaboration with Fremont High School. The project includes installing a new small fence around the garden, adding a table (with materials funded by the organizers and crafted by Fremont HS), and commissioning a local artist to create a "vine" artwork on the sidewalk. This will make the path to the garden more enchanting, especially for the students of Horace Mann Elementary School.
Neighborhood: Melrose
Phoenix Rising Peace Park Beautification Project
Project Description: This Adopt a Spot is a cherished haven for the community, where residents and children frequently enjoy the garden. Neighborhood potlucks are often held at the park to welcome new residents and build community. The garden needs new plantings to fill empty spots, replace aging plants, and further beautify the area, with neighbors assisting in the planting efforts.
Neighborhood: Eastmont Hills
St. Louis Vet Beautification
Project Description: The aim is to transform an area with unrealized potential into a beautifully refurbished planted space with a colorful wall behind it. Although on private property, the site is entirely public-facing and adjacent to a busy section of sidewalk next to the branch library. The community will benefit from the visible enhancement of this spot, promoting a sense of well-being and neighborhood beauty. In recent years, the Dimond area has experienced increased crime and many shuttered businesses, impacting its appearance and sense of safety. Dimond Improvement Association (DIA) is determined to reverse this trend. Collaboration with a commercial property and business owner is a key aspect of this beautification project, which could serve as a model for similar initiatives at other properties in the Dimond area.
Neighborhood: Dimond District
Eastmont Pocket Planter Gardens
Project Description: A community landscaping project focused on sidewalk planters can draw inspiration from the principles of pocket parks. The project aims to enhance the Eastmont Neighborhood, promote community engagement, and contribute to environmental sustainability. The project will begin by identifying suitable locations along the sidewalks near vacant lots where planters can be installed without obstructing pedestrian traffic. The planters will feature a mix of native and drought-resistant plants, ensuring sustainability and reducing water consumption. Additionally, each planter may be equipped with solar path lights to improve street lighting. These small green spaces will transform unused or underutilized areas into vibrant communal environments, enhancing the neighborhood's aesthetic appeal and fostering a sense of community.
Neighborhood: Eastmont
CalTrans Planting Adoption Extension
Project Description: A few years ago, the neighborhood coalition adopted the off-ramp at the 580 EB exit at High Street for planting. By installing drought-tolerant and native plants, they have beautified the area and prevented it from becoming a homeless encampment, as the site was previously used in this manner despite being unsafe and unsuitable. Extending the planting adoption will enhance the area's attractiveness, increase fire safety, and prevent camping.
Neighborhood: Laurel, Allendale, and Maxwell Park ("LAMP")
Rainbow 27Y Parklet
Project Description: This project aims to add three street trees around a parklet on Bancroft Ave. This section of Bancroft Ave in East Oakland is bereft of trees. The plan is to reclaim a portion of it by planting three City of Oakland-approved California native street trees around the perimeter of the parklet.
Neighborhood: Seminary
Rooftop Refurbishment & Raised Bed Mending
Project Description: The grant funding will be used to revitalize planting beds at the Bottoms Up Community Garden. This includes replacing and resizing deteriorating raised beds, repairing and amending soil, improving irrigation, and planting the rooftop garden, along with adding perennial flowering plants to the street-view perimeter beds. The raised beds will be shortened by three feet to widen the path and enhance accessibility for individuals with different mobility needs, while also protecting food production. The rooftop garden refurbishment aims to activate more food-producing areas and create an inviting street view. Perennial flowering plants on the perimeter beds will engage neighbors year-round. The revitalization is expected to be completed within four months, with each goal addressed individually over three weeks.
Neighborhood: South Prescott
Lincoln Square Park Alice Street Alley Improvement Project
Project Description: This project aims to improve blighted landscape wells in a high-traffic pedestrian alley adjacent to a school and park in downtown Oakland Chinatown. Community benefits include 1) engaging neighborhood youth in a creative art project to promote community stewardship and connection to the park, 2) beautifying a highly visible area in the public park that is currently an eyesore, 3) reducing litter traps by elevating tree wells to sidewalk grade or slightly above and improving drainage, 4) dramatically reducing weed growth by installing filter fabric, colorful pavers, and compacted granite sand, and 5) serving as a model for other areas in the park and city, inspiring further community action.
Neighborhood: Chinatown
48th Avenue Beautification
Project Description: The project is aimed to build billboards that will cover a dilapidated fence, spanning the 150+ ft fence along 48th Ave. Different artists will be commissioned to create murals on these billboards. Previously commissioned murals on this block have attracted people who come to photograph and video the art. This initiative aims to reduce the area's threatening demeanor and contribute to keeping this corner of Oakland beautiful.
Neighborhood: Fairfax, Maxwell Park
Clinton / San Antonio Friendly Neighborhood
Project Description: The project involves establishing planter boxes along E 8th Street, E 11th Street, and E 11th Ave to enhance neighborhood aesthetics, prevent littering, and reduce crime. This initiative aims to make residents feel safe and comfortable with the addition of beautiful flowers, while also helping to deter homeless encampments and illegal activities. Neighbors will take turns inspecting the planter boxes daily as part of a neighborhood watch, improving the quality of life in the area for all community members.
Neighborhood: Clinton, San Antonio