Like gardeners at plenty of other long-tenured city gardens on once-vacant lots, La Finquita had hoped the Philadelphia Land Bank would provide a pathway for Philadelphia Catholic Worker to secure permanent ownership of the property. Even though protecting gardens like La Finquita is among the Land Bank’s explicit goals, it is not yet able to acquire privately owned tax-delinquent parcels for disposition to new owners. La Finquita could no longer afford to wait.

Earlier this year the garden’s gates were locked and No Trespassing signs were posted. An entity called Mayrone LLC filed a deed for the property in late February, showing a purchase from the co-executors of the last beneficiary of the estate of the defunct company. Along with the purchase, Mayrone paid the back taxes.

But the legal complaint filed Friday asserts that the property wasn’t theirs to sell, and asks the court to affirm that the Philadelphia Catholic Worker is the owner.

“We are all staying very positive. We have so much support from people in the neighborhood, businesses, gardeners, people in our community,” said Goff. The garden’s perennials are waking up and spring planting will continue undeterred. “We’re going to have our first official workday next week.”

La Finquita is hardly alone as a long-tenured urban garden that lacks clear ownership. Amy Laura Cahn rattles off a handful of sites on similarly precarious ground. Absent a fully functioning land bank to facilitate land transfers that ensure the stability and longevity of these gardens, urban agriculture continues faces an uphill battle in neighborhoods across the city.

“It’s taking a long time to overcome the notion of gardens as interim use,” Cahn says. That’s despite the city’s sustainability agenda, the enormous investments by the Philadelphia Water Department in green stormwater infrastructure, the importance of food access, and awareness that cities need green spaces to combat urban heat. “All of these things that we know now and you still have to go up against the notion that gardens are an interim use and are awaiting a higher and better use. If we think that there’s always a higher and better use than a garden, then we will never have a garden. It is absolutely an environmental justice issue. It is an equity issue.”

Gardeners hope the court will enable Philadelphia Catholic Worker to establish clear ownership of the land, enabling a long-term plan for the space.

To Goff and her fellow gardeners, La Finquita is a precious asset.

“We walked around the entire neighborhood and there’s nothing like this left,” she said. “In every square inch of South Kensington, this is it.”