The Business of Urban Farming Takes Root in Detroit Farmers, the original BIZ Experiencess, are finding a profitable niche in the vast amount of abandoned land in the Motor City.

By Amanda Lewan Edited by Dan Bova

Opinions expressed by BIZ Experiences contributors are their own.

Greg Willerer may not seem like your average BIZ Experiences. The once full-time school teacher quit his job to follow his passion for farming in the most unlikely of places. Located not far from Downtown Detroit, Willerer launched his urban farming business on just one acre of land.

During his first year, Willerer earned almost the equivalent of his teaching salary. His venture, Brother Nature Produce, sells locally grown produce to restaurants across Detroit. They recently received a $10,000 grant to help grow their business from the New Economy Initiative's small business challenge, and his farm was among one of five Detroit based urban farms to be awarded.

Related: Two Urban Farmers Test the 'Eat Local' Business

Willerer's story is part of a growing trend in a city with a bountiful amount of unused land. With an estimated 20 square miles of vacant land, Detroit's abandoned lots are roughly the size of Manhattan according to the Detroit Future City Report. Detroit has an estimated 40,000 blighted properties needing to be cleared. The city allows residents to get an easy start at urban farming with the sale of side lots for only $100 dollars through the Land Bank.

BIZ Experiencess here see a business opportunity to grow locally, reinventing the way the land is used, while creating products made from an all around sustainable business model.

Growing and serving locally

Noah Link got his start at urban farming after moving back to Michigan in 2010. Link saw the potential for organic farming to take off in Detroit. His business Food Farm has since sustained it's needs and hired on several employees to grow, profiting from sales at Detroit's Eastern Market, through the City Commons Agricultural program, and by selling to local restaurants and businesses.

"There is definitely opportunity for urban agriculture businesses to grow in Detroit," said Link. "Next year we'll operate a weekly onsite cafe to serve meals based around our own organic produce."

Other farms are expanding their offerings to grow, as well. Buffalo Street Farm is adding a small vineyard to their land in Detroit. Co-founder Chris McGrane says it may take a lot of groundwork to become sustainable, profitable business.

"Successful urban growers usually find a high value niche crops to keep business afloat, or use a cooperative model," said McGrane, pointing out the City Commons program both farms participate in.

Though land is plentiful, urban farmers must secure land suitable for farming and work around city zoning and licensing. Link says he always encourages BIZ Experiencess to find ways to integrate into the existing farming community, and to keep an eye out for ways to reach new markets.

Related: Two Young BIZ Experiencess Get Their Hands Dirty With Urban Farming

New food products launch

One way these urban farmers are expanding their reach is by connecting with other food BIZ Experiencess. Devita Davidson of Foodlab Detroit, a network of food BIZ Experiencess in the city, has helped create a partnership with local urban farms called Detroit Grown and Made. The project's goal is to see special-edition products developed with Detroit grown produce.

Products launched so far include Strawberry Basil Jam by Beau Bien Fine Food and a Strawberry and Fig leaf drinking vinegar by McClary Bros, a company specializing in craft drinking vinegars.

"These products have been wildly successful with sales exceeding their expectations," said Davidson. Excited by the successful start, Davidson sees this partnership as just one step in transforming Detroit's food supply chain into one that is locally sourced and grown.

"From preserving land for Detroiters to grow food, to food BIZ Experiencess who are processing that produce, to retailers who buy and sell locally grown/made food, a crop of new businesses and nonprofits are building an integrated food economy in Detroit," said Davidson.

The largest urban farm of them all

One BIZ Experiences in Detroit is thinking big when it comes to repurposing the land. Hantz Farms boasts the title of the largest urban farm in Detroit. Owner John Hantz made his fortune in the financial services industry, before turning his sights to urban farming as a way to address blight in the city.

"We were looking for a tool that could deal with a large amount of blight at once," said Mike Score, president of Hantz Farms. "We knew that a larger scale farm could be attractive and profitable in the long run."

The Hantz Farms project, a 174-acre tree farm, is just beginning to take root after several years of planning. On Detroit's East Side hundreds of trees have been planted this fall and 57 blighted homes will be demolished by the end of the year. Five full time employees work on the farm that Score says is on track to meet long term financial goals.

But for the Hantz team, a driving factor for entering this industry is closely tied to helping the community.

"When we come down the street our neighbors wave and smile at us. That really motivates us," said Score. "When we came in and mowed 175 acres and started ripping out the brush and tearing down houses, it made it possible for others to stay."

Like this first batch of trees on Hantz Farms, the urban farming movement in Detroit is growing. Detroit may see more BIZ Experiencess reinventing land and leading the way for a locally sourced food movement.

Related: How the Farm-to-Table Movement Is Helping Grow the Economy

Amanda Lewan

Founder and Editor of Michipreneur

Amanda Lewan is a Detroit based writer, Editor of Michipreneur, and co-founder of Bamboo Detroit.

Want to be an BIZ Experiences Leadership Network contributor? Apply now to join.

Science & Technology

How to Future-Proof Your Career in Today's AI-Powered World

Think your job is AI-proof? Only if you've got skills a machine can't fake, like creativity, ethics and real human judgment.

Starting a Business

These Brothers Started a Business to Improve an Everyday Task. They Made Their First Products in the Garage — Now They've Raised Over $100 Million.

Coulter and Trent Lewis had an early research breakthrough that helped them solve for the right problem.

Growing a Business

If Email Is Your Main Strategy, You're Missing the Easiest Way to Build Authority

Most marketing emails don't get read, but businesses are still treating email as their primary relationship-building tool. It's time for a new approach.

Marketing

Why Your Travel Brand Needs a Smarter Domain This Summer

Peak travel season is upon us, and brands across the travel industry have a major opportunity to sharpen their digital presence and stand out in an increasingly crowded online marketplace.

Starting a Business

This Is What the CEO of Kickstarter Wishes Aspiring BIZ Experiencess Knew

Everette Taylor founded his first company at 19 — this is his best advice for people who want to start a business.