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From Dream to Legacy
Introducing the growing hope accelerator kitchen!

Beloved community,
Five years ago, I had just joined the team at Growing Hope and had already had the opportunity to sit with and listen to, and learn from, our community. I listened to food entrepreneurs describe what they needed to turn a dream into a livelihood and to neighbors describe what was missing from our food landscape. Listened to the quiet, persistent conviction that one community member put simply when they said: “Ypsi deserves nice things.”
This month, we move full circle as we complete and open the Growing Hope Accelerator Kitchen.
For those who are new to our work, Growing Hope has operated an Incubator Kitchen since 2018, providing affordable, licensed commercial kitchen space for early-stage food entrepreneurs. That kitchen has supported more than 70 food businesses and helped launch 17 storefronts, food trucks, and co-packing operations across Southeast Michigan.
The Incubator is where dreams become reality. The Accelerator Kitchen is where reality becomes legacy.
Practically, the accelerator kitchen offers the infrastructure entrepreneurs need to enter wholesale and retail markets without taking on unsustainable debt. It is designed as a short-term (1-3 year) stepping stone for a business to move into its own brick-and-mortar store.
But it’s more than just a kitchen.
When we talk about investing in food sovereignty, this is part of what we mean: when our community defines the very food system that sustains us. When together, we exercise our autonomy to grow, make, sell, and share food. It’s not simply community-served or community-informed, but truly community-controlled.
For too long, the infrastructure of the food economy has been out of reach for an individual with a dream. Talented folks with generational recipes and community roots hit walls when it seemed like there was nowhere for them to turn.
The Accelerator Kitchen is a direct response to that gap.
And then, our businesses impact so much more than themselves.
They employ their neighbors.
They source from local farms.
They keep food dollars circulating in the community that generated them.
They become anchors.
This is our theory of change in living form.
A vibrant, diverse local food system leads to a vibrant local food economy that builds and celebrates local jobs, local gatherings, and a deeper circular or solidarity economy.
Recently, I was talking with Khadija, the owner of Samosa House, which will be the first business to occupy the Accelerator, and was so tangibly reminded of the why behind this whole project.
Sitting with Khadija and hearing her story calms the storm of logistics and timelines tied to this project that have been constant over the past several months. Instead,
I see joy.
I see a woman describing what it means to truly live out her dream: to build something with the potential to impact her children and their children. I see that our community’s infrastructure is finally catching up with the many individual and collective visions.
That is why we remain diligent.
The Ypsilanti Farmers MarketPlace campus is coming to life as a community food hub. Not simply a place to buy and sell food, but a place to build community, build movements, and gather around the table together.
I am so grateful to get to be part of a community that believes in the transformative power of our local food system.
Thank you for being part of this community.
In solidarity,
Julius
P.S. Samosa House is getting ready to welcome you! Follow them online and stay tuned for their grand opening announcement coming very soon!
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