
Monthly Clean-Up – Good Prospect Community Garden
May 10 @ 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM

Monthly Clean-Up: How Good Prospect Community Garden Brings Bernal Heights Together
A Monthly Tradition That Builds Community
Bernal Heights residents gather at Good Prospect Community Garden every second Saturday for their monthly cleanup event. What began as a practical necessity has evolved into something much more meaningful—a cornerstone of neighborhood connection in an increasingly disconnected world.
“People come for the gardening but stay for the community,” explains Mike Doherty, who coordinates the cleanup events. “We see everyone from retirees to families with young children. The garden becomes this incredible mixing bowl where people who might never cross paths otherwise work side by side.”
The Numbers Tell a Story
Community gardens don’t just beautify neighborhoods—they transform them. Recent studies highlight their remarkable impact:
- Research from the American Journal of Community Psychology (2022) shows that crime rates in neighborhoods with community gardens decrease by as much as 15% compared to similar areas without gardens.
- According to the Urban Institute’s neighborhood revitalization study, property values within a quarter-mile of community gardens increase by an average of 9.4% over five years.
- According to Trust for Public Land findings, regular community garden participants report 63% higher rates of knowing their neighbors by name than non-participants in the same neighborhoods.
- A surprising 82% of regular participants in community garden activities report improved mental health and reduced stress levels, according to a 2023 survey by the National Recreation and Park Association.
Breaking Down Barriers
In Bernal Heights, a neighborhood experiencing demographic shifts like many parts of San Francisco, the garden serves as a rare common ground.
“I’ve lived on my block for twenty years, but it wasn’t until I started coming to these cleanups that I got to know the new families moving in,” says a longtime resident. “Now we watch each other’s houses when someone’s away, and my kids have babysitting jobs with families we met right here.”
How to Join
The Good Prospect Community Garden monthly cleanup happens every second Saturday from 10 am to 12 pm. No gardening experience is necessary—bring:
- Water bottle
- Sunscreen
- Gardening gloves if you have them (extras are available)
- A dish to share for the potluck (optional)
A Growing Movement
Good Prospect isn’t alone. San Francisco boasts over 120 community gardens throughout its neighborhoods. However, what makes Good Prospect special is its consistent monthly gathering that prioritizes relationship-building alongside garden maintenance.
“In a city where people often feel isolated despite living so close together, these monthly cleanups create genuine community,” Greening Projects‘ Jorge Romero-Lozano notes.
Join Us
Whether you have a green thumb or can barely keep a houseplant alive, the Good Prospect Community Garden monthly cleanup offers something increasingly rare in urban life—a chance to work alongside neighbors toward a common goal and transform a piece of your neighborhood into something beautiful together.