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The Pothole Gardener<a href="http://thepotholegardener.com/">Steve Wheen</a> understands that nobody likes to pay a pile of taxes only to hit potholes on their way to work every day, so he started filling up the pesky cracks in East London with mini living worlds comprised of soil, plants, and adorable props. The <a href="http://inhabitat.com/guerrilla-gardening-mini-ecosystem-installations-on-the-streets-of-madrid-take-root/">guerrilla gardener</a> creates these mini (mostly domestic) scenes on quiet streets, dead end lanes, and foot paths, snaps photographs of his work, and then removes the props so that nobody gets a chair in their tire! When he's satisfied with his projects, he documents them over at <a href="http://thepotholegardener.com/">The Pothole Gardener</a>.1
The Pothole GardenerSteve Wheen fills potholes with plants, soil and mini props2
The Pothole GardenerThe idea is to draw attention to East London's potholes3
The Pothole GardenerWhat started as an art project for University has turned into a continued labor of love4
The Pothole GardenerWheen creates his mini worlds on quite streets, dead ends, and bike paths5
The Pothole GardenerHe then photographs his work6
The Pothole GardenerHe removes the props so that nobody gets a chair in their tire7
The Pothole GardenerAnd then goes home to blog about it8
The Pothole GardenerWheen hopes that his little urban gardens will put a smile on passersby's faces9
The Pothole GardenerHe certainly put one on ours!10
The Pothole GardenerThe artist doesn't claim to be the first guerrilla gardener or even pothole gardening. The practice goes back about four years, Wheen says.11











