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WPC 2026 Perspectives Newsletter

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Mother-Daughter Team Helps Community Garden be Accessible to All

The Western Pennsylvania Conservancy protects and restores exceptional places to provide our region with clean waters and healthy forests, wildlife and natural areas for the benefit of present and future generations. The Conservancy creates greenspaces and gardens, contributing to the vitality of our cities and towns, and preserves Fallingwater, a symbol of people living in harmony with nature.

NON-PROFIT ORG US POSTAGE PAID PITTSBURGH, PA PERMIT NO 2504

800 Waterfront Drive, Pittsburgh, PA 15222 412-288-2777 info@paconserve.org WaterLandLife.org | Fallingwater.org

There is a “new” community garden and outdoor classroom in Pittsburgh’s historic Manchester neighborhood, called the Page Street Community Accessible Vegetable Garden, that is near and dear to Michelle Jones' heart. It’s also a special place for her daughter, Dr. Tyi-Sanna Jones.

Perspectives

“I remember hearing about this garden as a child from my mom, what things were growing, how it looked and what people in the community were eating from it. Those were important, fond memories,” says Tyi-Sanna, who grew up in Pittsburgh and works as an independent contractor specializing in helping companies and organizations achieve accessibility and inclusion goals. Michelle Jones' connection to the garden, located at 1323 Page Street, goes back to the 1980s. Since that time, over many years, the garden had fallen into disrepair. In 2019, community members, including Michelle and Tyi-Sanna, asked the Conservancy for help reimagining the space, including reestablishing the natural vegetation and making the space more accessible and inclusive.

A newsletter highlighting experiences of our members, partners and volunteers

Outdoor Classrooms Foster Natural Connections for Young Learners Community members, including Dr. Tyi-Sanna Jones (middle in orange glasses and shorts), and educators from PPS Conroy Education Center take a welldeserved break with Conservancy staff after one of the first plantings at the newly reimagined Page Street Community Accessible Vegetable Garden in Pittsburgh’s Manchester neighborhood.

“When I was in graduate school, I became more interested in universal design for community spaces. I immediately thought of how we can turn the Page Street location into a space where students, adults and people from all walks of life and abilities can come and just be themselves,” explains Tyi-Sanna. With generous financial support from the Edith L. Trees Charitable Trust and Christopher and Dana Reeve Foundation, the Conservancy, with the help of community members and volunteers, enhanced and transformed the space in 2023 with several native trees, hundreds of shrubs and pollinator-friendly

perennials, eight raised garden beds, seven accessible garden beds and a 2,080-square-foot accessible, permeable pathway made from recycled rubber tires.

“People should not have to change who they are, but we can change the space by removing all barriers that prevent or limit participation,” explains Tyi-Sanna. “This is the purpose of universal design, and I’m so proud of the work we’ve done so far with WPC and other community members at Page Street.”

Open to the community in 2023, the Page Street Community Accessible Vegetable Garden features planting beds and a permeable pathway. Students from PPS Conroy Education Center use the garden for outdoor activities and learning. Dr. Tyi-Sanna Jones holds a pumpkin in the garden, which she and her mother, Michelle Jones, helped reestablish.

WESTERN PENNSYLVANIA CONSERVANCY

SAT. MAY 2, 2026

O N M E M B E R S ' DAY you and your family can:

8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.

To show our appreciation to our members, we’re excited to welcome you to a full day of fun at beautiful Bear Run Nature Reserve! Join us at The Barn at Fallingwater and for a complimentary continental breakfast from 8:30 - 10:30 a.m. Choose from morning and afternoon activities like naturalist-guided hikes and other outdoor experiences, educational sessions and free tours of Fallingwater, celebrating its 90th anniversary this year! Meet Conservancy staff and learn how your valued support is being put to work at the Annual Meeting. Enjoy a delicious catered lunch buffet at the Barn ($24 for adults, free for children 10 and under) or join us with your own lunch. Spend the whole day, or just a portion. Activities are free, but you must purchase lunch reservations in advance by Friday, April 24. Register for the day and/or purchase lunch online through one of the following ways:

Learn about the work that you support throughout the region in educational talks and the Annual Meeting, a special presentation featuring program highlights. Meet our naturalists and educators who specialize in subjects from botany and geology to organic architecture. Explore Bear Run Nature Reserve and beyond on themed guided hikes. Tour Fallingwater* or enjoy the grounds at your own pace. Shop the Museum Store and visit the Speyer Gallery featuring a special exhibit of Kaufmann Family home movies. Shop a selection of items from the Museum Store at the Barn and purchase plants for your yard to support native species and wildlife. *Your free tour of Fallingwater must be scheduled in advance for Members’ Day. Call Visitor Services at 724-329-8501 for reservations.

• Visit WaterLandLife.org/MembersDay • Scan the QR code below • Call 1-866-564-6972 or return the coupon below (with check payment if you wish to purchase lunch).

Please cut this portion and return it to us using the enclosed envelope.

“As an educator, I love that so many school students and adult learners are using, experiencing and participating in this space now,” says Tyi-Sanna. “It’s exactly why we wanted to transform this area and make it a beautiful, welcoming and inclusive greenspace for students and the Manchester community to just be themselves in nature.” If you have questions, want to learn more, or are interested in volunteering to help keep this garden thriving, contact the Conservancy’s Director of Community Greening Marah Fielden at mfielden@paconserve.org.

Imagine preschool students participating in a nature walk without seeing a tree, hearing birds chirp, or being asked to describe parts of a plant without actually touching one.

Celebrate With Us at Members’ Day!

The raised vegetable garden beds stand three feet off the ground, allowing gardeners in wheelchairs easier access to plant flowers and vegetables without needing to stand or bend. Students from Pittsburgh Public Schools’ Conroy Education Center, which serves nearly 200 students requiring life-skills assistance, autistic support and multiple disability support needs, is located across the street from the garden.

Giant Eagle will provide sustaining financial support for the vegetables, flowers and shrubs in the planting beds and other needs as the current sponsor of the Conservancy’s Page Street Community Accessible Vegetable Garden. Other community partners that participated in the creation of, and will continue to use, the garden include Bidwell Training Center, Manchester Academic Charter School and City Connections CCAC Campus.

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Issue 10 Spring 2026

Name Address

Scan this QR code to register

City

State

Zip

#

Adults & Children 11 and Older—Lunch Buffet $24

#

Children 10 and Younger—Lunch Buffet (Free)

#

Adults & Children—Bringing Own Lunch (Free)

$

Total Amount Enclosed

E-mail Phone

Not a member, yet? Visit WaterLandLife.org/Membership and join today!

Thanks to the longstanding work of the Western Pennsylvania Conservancy, thousands of young learners in our region don’t have to imagine these scenarios anymore. Young learners are actually experiencing them. Through the Conservancy’s school grounds greening program, hard blacktop parking lots or grass-only surfaces outside of many local schools have been transformed into outdoor classrooms and play spaces. These areas feature native vegetation such as Eastern redbud trees, black chokeberry, little bluestem grasses and bush honeysuckle, and functional, creative elements such as tree stumps for tables and artfully designed birdhouses that foster imagination, among other qualities. These outdoor spaces help children connect to nature by creating opportunities for play, learning and socializing, while helping educators facilitate hands-on experiences and naturebased learning. Research shows that time spent outdoors learning provides a wide range of benefits for children, including creativity, imagination, curiosity, problem-solving, discovery, observation, experimentation and social interaction. These schoolyard transformations have environmental benefits, too, by creating habitat for birds, improving air quality, providing shade and reducing stormwater. The Grable Foundation provided the initial funding for the Conservancy’s school grounds greening program in 2008, and through that generosity, Conservancy staff transformed the outdoor areas of 57 high schools and elementary schools within Pittsburgh Public Schools to natural play spaces with native plantings to provide shade, landscape accents and natural points of interest for children. To create those spaces, Conservancy staff initiated a collaborative design process that involved landscape designers and school administrators to help ensure the outdoor spaces were unique to the learning environment of each school. This work is very rewarding, says Marah Fielden, the Conservancy’s director of community greening, who now manages the Conservancy staff who work with school

As one of the first of WPC school grounds greening sites, PPS Fulton PreK-5, a neighborhood school located in Pittsburgh’s Highland Park community, an outdoor space was transformed in 2008 with benches, trees and native plants. Since then, thousands of students have learned and engaged in this and other outdoor classrooms created by our school grounds greening work.

administrators and educators to transform these spaces. Learning and playing in nature has positive academic, physical and mental health benefits–so these spaces go beyond just nurturing each student’s sense of wonder and discovery–they provide team-building, observational skills and students’ overall mental well-being. Cassandra Brown, a nature lover and nurse practitioner for 15 years at Pittsburgh Arsenal PreK-5, a neighborhood school with a diverse student population, agrees. The outdoor classroom at Arsenal was one of the first early childhood centers established (Continued on next page)

WHAT'S INSIDE! This issue of WPC’s Perspectives newsletter focuses on our school grounds greening work, which is creating spaces for young learners to experience nature and learning in an outdoor classroom setting. To learn more, volunteer, find out other ways to get involved or donate, email us at info@paconserve.org or visit WaterLandLife.org.

WaterLandLife.org

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