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A 'paradise' amid the rocks and weeds

Walker Marsh founded Tha Flower Factory, a half-acre flower farm that brings beauty to a neighborhood with many vacant home as well as being a business. (Kenneth K. Lam, Baltimore Sun video)

It has been years since visitors to North Gay and Washington in East Baltimore have seen anything much but blight. Boarded-up rowhouses line the streets. Weeds flourish in sidewalk cracks.

But Walker Marsh looked at the Broadway East neighborhood and saw possibility. Marsh, 28, has created a flower farm that is an oasis of neighborhood beauty, put teenagers to work and holds out the promise of becoming an engine of economic opportunity.

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"People look at a neighborhood like this and they don't see much in the way of hope," Marsh said while watering hundreds of plants at the half-acre site of Tha Flower Factory. "I'm hoping this shows there's a lot that can be done with the resources we have."

With the help of a grant Walker Marsh converted a half-acre vacant lot at the corner of Gay and Washington streets into a flower garden named Tha Flower Factory. Marsh gets ready to water his flowers. (Kenneth K. Lam / Baltimore Sun)

Marsh, a soft-spoken former Cylburn Arboretum horticultural assistant, got the idea for the business while working at Real Food Farm in Clifton Park, a produce farm operated by Civic Works, an urban service nonprofit.

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He created Tha Flower Factory with the help of a $63,800 grant he won in Baltimore's annual Growing Green Design Competition in 2014, part of the mayor's campaign to transform vacant lots.

He has been selling flowers for several months now — Marsh names a cafe, floral design studio and variety of neighbors as clients — and he hired nine teens as workers this summer through Common Ground, a pilot program for youth offered by the nonprofit Community Conferencing Center.

Positive effects seem to be taking root, and neighbors have noticed.

As he watered his bright yellow sunflowers, purple salvia, pink phlox and red day lilies — not to mention the smattering of cabbage, peppers and tomatoes he grows and shares with neighbors for free — passing motorists honked encouragement and passers-by stopped to chat.

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Andre Matthews, a frequent visitor to his daughter's home across Gay Street, came over to visit his new friend, who lives a few miles away in Waverly.

With the help of a grant Walker Marsh converted a half-acre vacant lot at the corner of Gay and Washington streets into a flower garden named Tha Flower Factory. Marsh gets ready to flower his flowers. (Kenneth K. Lam / Baltimore Sun)

Matthews called Marsh's creation "a paradise in the jungle."

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