Celery Fields

Sublime flood mitigation in Southwest Florida

Falon Mihalic
3 min readFeb 28, 2014

I recently went on a guided tour of Celery Fields, a flood mitigation project owned by Sarasota county. From a distance, the landform is an anomalous bump in Florida’s flat terrain. The tour revealed an unexpected connection to the Phillippi Creek watershed and views not available elsewhere. The original site was converted from spring-fed swamp to celery farm and used for agriculture for many years which accumulated pesticide residue in the soil leaving behind high levels of arsenic. The original swampy area was a tributary to Phillippi Creek. Today, much of the original land area of the Phillippi Creek drainage basin is residential development that has changed the way stormwater behaves in the system. Development decreases permeable land and creates increased runoff and subsequent flooding because water can’t percolate into the ground.

The creek’s drainage basin covers a large area of residential development (see image above) and flooded severely in the past. The flooding prompted the massive multi-phase earthworks at Celery Fields, converting it into a thriving bird sanctuary and engineered wetlands for flood water storage. The mound is a pile of polluted soil that was scraped from the site, mounded and capped with clay because polluted material must be immobilized and is often expensive to ship and bury elsewhere.

There are flocks of birds in every variation imaginable- a birder’s playground. The walking paths through the marsh areas are best for photographing wood storks, Ahingas drying on fence posts, with Bald Eagles and Ospreys circling above. The wetlands were shrinking in the early winter dry season and saltbush,Baccharis halmifolia, was in full bloom- striking up a subtle color conversation between the yellow male flowers and white female ones. Saltbush is dioecious; has male and female plants. The soft duotone flower plumes create a lovely creamy effect in the wetland. We walked this area in a slow ellipse to ascend the mound.

We came to the top of the mound where I could see east towards Myakka State Park and hear rehabilitated lions roaring for lunch at the adjacent Big Cat Sanctuary. I unexpectedly felt light and expansive, peering out at the live oak canopies spread in clumps to the east like perfectly arranged broccoli standing upright on a curved plate. The blue-gray heat haze intensified the depth of field and I felt small on top of the mound with a view of the world bending away from me. Heightened moments of wonder come by surprise and give a glimpse into the sublime.

The project is a testament to nature’s resiliency and human stubbornness. We disguise our past mistakes by turning them into sightseeing areas, restored ecologies, or “green initiatives”. Brownfield sites present potential work for landscape architects like me, but I feel unsettled by the expectation that designers should remake a place by obliterating evidence of past wrong-doing. A contaminated soil mound is one obvious “cover-up” at Celery Fields. At the larger scale, the earthworks mitigate flooding that was caused by increased impervious area from sprawling development. We have engineered our way out of poor building decisions and, in doing so, escaped responsibility for them. I touch the native flowers on top of the mound and wonder: Will we ever be forgiven?

View of Celery Fields with Capped Soil Mound and reconstructed wetlands.

--

--

Falon Mihalic

I design beautiful landscapes that connect people to nature. Landscape Architect and Artist at Falon Land Studio. www.falonland.com