Welcome to the Fringe
This is a working creative landscape—infrastructure adapts to program needs, and the site evolves through use, seasonal cycles, and ecological intervention.
At a Glance
The property includes:
- First meadow: Main gathering area and event space
- Second meadow: Greenhouse, small blueberry orchard, and production activity zones
- Forest edges: Wooded areas for exploration and quieter programming
- Wetlands: Seasonal water features that shift throughout the year
- Infrastructure zone: Compact production studio with slope sink, outdoor shower (solar-powered + rainwater catchment), composting toilet, and activities deck ("The Hex")
The site is designed for outdoor programming. Most activities happen in meadow spaces, under temporary structures, or in designated work zones.
Quick Navigation
Logistics
Philosophy
What to Expect
Forest Fringe Farm is rural land—not a resort, not a polished venue. Infrastructure is functional and adaptable, designed to support creative work without dictating how that work unfolds.
The site has:
- Outdoor kitchen for meal prep
- Composting sanitation
- Rainwater catchment and solar power (limited capacity)
- Flexible gathering spaces (no permanent indoor structures)
- Meadow and forest areas for dispersed activities
What it doesn't have:
- Permanent indoor lodging (groups bring their own tents or arrange offsite accommodations)
- Wi-Fi or strong cell service (intentionally limited connectivity)
- Paved paths or ADA-accessible infrastructure (terrain is uneven, rural, and seasonal)
- 24/7 power or running water from municipal sources (off-grid systems only)
This is a working land platform. Expect mud, bugs, seasonal weather, and infrastructure that requires some adaptation. Groups that thrive here value autonomy, flexibility, and the trade-offs that come with rural space.
Site Philosophy
Forest Fringe Farm approaches land use as active practice. The site changes through seasonal cycles, ecological intervention, and program use. Infrastructure evolves based on what groups need and what the land can support.
We steward the land through permaculture principles, organic methods, and low-impact systems. This isn't wilderness—it's working context for creative production, designed to support experimentation while respecting the land's capacity.
Ready to Book?
If Forest Fringe Farm sounds like the right fit for your program, submit an inquiry to discuss logistics, check availability, and explore rates.