Intertidal Allotment is long-term project by Andrew Merritt, one half of the artist duo Something & Son, creating a functional artwork and new community allotment on the north coast of Sheppey.
The project takes inspiration from the traditional allotment form and expands it into the intertidal zone – the area of the seashore covered at high tide and uncovered at low tide – where tidal movements create a ‘Goldilocks effect’, allowing biodiverse habitats to form and a variety of organisms, including algae, seaweeds, funguses, edible flora, barnacles, limpets, mussels, crustaceans mosses and lichens, to thrive.
Unique egalitarian spaces, allotments are a rare example of self-build architecture that reuses waste materials. The coast is an area where the sea meets the land, a place of great energy, constant change and rich biodiversity. Intertidal Allotment seeks to embrace these qualities, creating a hospitable environment for people to mix, and new ideas to seed and grow.
Engaging communities in sustainable food production and biodiversity, the allotment seeks to revitalise traditional methods of food production that have long been part of local coastal heritage and reconnect communities with the land and sea. The aim is to create a modular and sustainable system that responds to the needs of local people, and which can be replicated in other coastal locations.
From January – December 2025, our Friends of Intertidal Allotment will be meeting monthly to learn more about the project, have a deeper involvement, help guide the project’s future direction and to be involved in hands-on making and gardening activities. The Friends scheme is only open to people who live on, or are very well connected to, the Isle of Sheppey.
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Intertidal Allotment is being delivered in partnership with a range of national and local organisations, including Ideas Test, Swale Borough Council, and Sheppey Matters. The prototype will be monitored by students from the School of Anthropology and Conservation, University of Kent.
The project is kindly supported using public funding by the National Lottery through Arts Council England and The National Lottery Community Fund. With additional support from Ideas Test, Swale Borough Council, and Kent County Council.