Sennel Gardens in full summer production — rows of vegetables with row covers and sunflowers
501(c)(3) Nonprofit • Washington, DC

Sennel
Gardens

"Grow what you can, where you can."

Transforming vacant lots in DC's Ward 7 into thriving urban farms — growing fresh food, creating local jobs, and building community resilience one harvest at a time.

Turning Blight
Into Bounty

Sennel Gardens is a volunteer-led, community-driven 501(c)(3) nonprofit headquartered in Washington, DC. We utilize no-till and low-till farming practices to transform vacant, neglected lots into productive communal farms.

"One should grow what you can, where you can. Whether it is 1,000 acres or 1 square foot, nutritious produce can be grown in all spaces."

Vacant land doesn't generate tax revenue. It doesn't create jobs. It collects litter and drains community pride. We see every empty lot as an opportunity to feed families, employ neighbors, and restore dignity.

Volunteers harvesting produce at Sennel Gardens with crates of fresh greens
The Transformation

From Vacant Lots to Vibrant Farms

Every Sennel Gardens site starts the same way — an abandoned, blighted lot that nobody sees potential in. We see a farm.

Empty vacant lot in Ward 7 — before Sennel Gardens

Before

Vacant, overgrown, unused

Sennel
Thriving urban farm with row covers and sunflowers — after Sennel Gardens

After

Productive, beautiful, nourishing

Our Impact

Three Pillars of Growth

Everything we do is rooted in three principles that drive lasting change.

Enrichment

Self-growth through cultivation. Whether it's 1,000 acres or 1 square foot, we believe in growing where you are. Every volunteer leaves with new skills and deeper roots in their community.

Nutrition

Reducing the distance residents travel to access fresh, nutritious food. We increase community resilience and improve health outcomes by putting farms where food deserts used to be.

Economic Growth

Each location creates employment and revenue opportunities in the DC metro area. Volunteers and employees gain professional and personal development skills that extend far beyond the garden.

Our Locations

Garden Sites

Two active sites in DC's Ward 7, with plans to expand through the city's Urban Farm Tax Abatement Program.

45th Street farm in full summer growth

45th Street Farm

520 45th St NE, Washington, DC 20019

Our original site since 2023. What began as a vacant lot is now a productive communal farm with cultivated rows, composting, row covers, and seasonal harvests serving the surrounding neighborhood.

Foote Street garden with mulched beds

Foote Street Farm

4419 Foote St NE, Washington, DC 20019

Our second location, expanding Sennel Gardens' reach deeper into Ward 7. Features mulched beds, no-till practices, and a growing variety of produce for the local community.

Emmanuel 'Manny' McDaniel — Founder of Sennel Gardens

Meet Manny

Emmanuel Euphrates McDaniel

Founder • Sennel Gardens

Emmanuel "Manny" McDaniel founded Sennel Gardens in 2023 with a simple conviction: every vacant lot is a missed opportunity to feed a family. A graduate of ECO City Farm's Beginner Farmer Training Program, Manny brought hands-on agricultural training together with deep community ties to build something lasting.

Under his leadership, Sennel Gardens has grown from a single vacant lot to multiple sites across DC, all operated through volunteer power and community partnerships. His vision extends beyond food — he's growing economic opportunity, environmental stewardship, and neighborhood pride.

ECO City Farm Graduate
No-Till Practitioner
DC Urban Farmer
Where it all started — spring 2023
Row cover technology
Inside the hoop house
Kale and brassicas close up
Lush garden with sunflowers
Harvest day
Join Us

Get Involved

Sennel Gardens is volunteer-led and community-driven. There are many ways to be part of the harvest.

Volunteer

Join us at one of our garden sites. No experience needed — just a willingness to get your hands in the soil and learn.

Donate

As a 501(c)(3), your tax-deductible contribution goes directly to tools, seeds, soil, and site development.

Partner

We work with land grant universities, USDA programs, local orgs, and community groups to expand our impact.

Contact Us →
Resources

Start Your Own

Interested in urban farming? Here are the organizations and programs that helped us.