Today’s Solutions: December 17, 2025

American households use more than 7 billion gallons of water per day just to tend to their lawns. Some experts estimate that up to 50 percent of that water is wasted due to evaporation, wind, or runoff. But what if we could use those lawn spaces for something more meaningful, such as growing local food?

Enter Crop Swap LA, a Los Angeles-based startup that’s rethinking the traditional front lawn by transforming it into gardens to feed entire neighborhoods with produce like kale, rainbow chard, and tomatoes.

“My company partners with homeowners who have a front yard and want to do something positive,” says Jamiah Hargins, founder of Crop Swap LA. By establishing what Crop Swap calls microfarms, neighborhoods pay for monthly subscriptions to the ultra-local food, and homeowners get both a share of the produce as well as a cut of the profit. “We maintain it, but they get part of the income every month,” Hargins says.

Crop Swap LA’s first microfarm took shape in View Park; a neighborhood considered a food desert because residents lack easy access to large supermarkets in the vicinity. Through Crop Swap LA, though, residents can subscribe to a three-pound mix of fresh, organic greens and vegetables for $36 a month.

On top of being an attractive source of local food, these microfarms also use optimal techniques for growing the produce, recycling water through the soil, and using only a tiny fraction of the water needed to maintain a traditional lawn. “We’re only using 8 percent of the water that was previously used to grow grass there, but now to grow food,” says Hargins.

The installation of Crop Swap LA’s first microfarm was funded by a grant from LA2050, a Goldhirsh Foundation program. Now the company aims to swap grass for food in hundreds of other neighborhoods, providing residents with a fresh source of healthy produce.

Image source: Crop Swap LA

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation regains ancestral lands near Yosemite in major c...

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Nearly 900 acres of ancestral territory have been officially returned to the Southern Sierra Miwuk Nation, marking a ...

Read More

8 fermented foods that your gut will love (and that taste great, too!) 

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM Fermented foods have been a dietary staple in many cultures for centuries, but in the U.S., they’re only ...

Read More

Breaking the silence: empowering menopausal women in the workplace

Addressing menopause in the workplace is long overdue in today's fast-changing work scene, where many are extending their careers into their 60s. According to ...

Read More

Insect migration: the hidden superhighway of the Pyrenees

Insects, while frequently disregarded, are critical to the planet's ecosystems. They make up about 90 percent of all animal species and play important functions ...

Read More