The summer market will open at the same time on May 11 but in a different place, as City Hall Park, the market’s home for nearly four decades, will soon close for a two-year renovation.
By day, 345 Pine Street is a dirt lot between the Barge Canal Market and the Chittenden Solid Waste District drop-off that Dealer.com workers use for overflow parking. But every Saturday through October, it will be home to the summer market’s 90-plus vendors — a huge relief to the organization’s executive director, Chris Wagner.
“At first it was mutiny,” Wagner said, recalling last fall when he told vendors they were being uprooted. “It was a challenge for me, but I was more than happy to do it to really convince them of how exciting this location could be and how up-and-coming the South End is.”
The market steering committee considered 17 temporary spots and eventually settled on Pine Street. The park renovation is scheduled to begin this July, according to Burlington Mayor Miro Weinberger.
“It was basically acknowledging construction has some impacts on them,” Weinberger said, adding, “We’re trying to be as supportive as possible as the city of this key institution.”
A memorandum of understanding between the two sides would also guarantee the market a home at City Hall Park at a reduced rate for three years after the park reopens. The first year back would be free, and the price would increase $5,000 annually up to the original $15,000 fee in year four, the draft MOU shows.
The Burlington City Council will review the agreement in the next couple of months, Weinberger said.
During the next two summers, the market will pay Dealer.com just $60 annually to rent its lot. The savings freed up funds for tents, signage and other promotional materials to publicize the move, Wagner said.
The market space will be closed to vehicles, but free parking is available behind the Maltex building at 431 Pine Street. As usual, there will be on-site bike parking and entertainment. The lot is also big enough to hold a “community spot” for groups such as the University of Vermont Extension Master Gardener Program and All Breed Rescue. Wagner said he couldn’t squeeze in that feature at busy City Hall Park.
Another perk? Vendors can serve alcohol because the market will be off city property. For eight markets this season, Citizen Cider and Zero Gravity Craft Brewery will host a beer garden so shoppers can chase their dumplings or artisan popcorn with local libations.
Still in progress, though, are logistics for a shuttle to capture waterfront traffic and provide transportation for lower-income residents.
“It would be really expensive,” Wagner said of a shuttle. “We’re trying to figure out if there’s some way we can trade or we can barter” for the service.
Moe O’Hara, owner of the Thirty-odd shop on Pine Street, said her customers are thrilled they’ll no longer have to contend with downtown crowds at the South End market. She sells her upcycled crafts at her Recycle Moe booth and will make the move to the new space.
“Maybe we’ll lose a few tourists, [but] we’ll gain in our local economy, our local customers,” O’Hara said. “People are going to seek it out. They’re going to want that burger every Saturday.”
That’s the hope for Does’ Leap Farm purveyor George van Vlaanderen, whose family has sold organic goat cheese at the market for 20 years and whose grilled sausages have a devoted following. Wagner said van Vlaanderen was “a tough nut to crack” when it came to convincing him the new locale would be viable.
But once Fairfield-based van Vlaanderen scoped out the area, he realized it has potential, calling it “the next frontier in Burlington.”
That reaction is typical of visitors who remember Pine Street as “this not so great place,” O’Hara said.
“I’ve just seen it grow,” she said. “For the past eight years, it’s been up and coming.”
Van Vlaanderen said he still has “a mild concern” about losing customers this year and next, but he also recognizes he could attract new ones from nearby Pine Street neighborhoods. Maybe the market’s success doesn’t depend on location, location, location, he suggested.
“It’s just so much more about the vendors and the management of the market than it is the venue. That’s really the heart of the market,” van Vlaanderen said. “I really think that vibe will continue regardless of where the market is.”
Still, Weinberger hopes the market will return to City Hall Park when construction concludes.
“They have been one of the contributors to a very strong downtown,” he said. “I’m eager to see them come back.”



The Farmer’s Market rents an entire BLOCK of the most valuable retail real estate in the entire state for only $15,000 annually!?! During the busiest season of the year too. That is absurd. That equates to an annual fee of $0.12 per sq ft in a part of the city where retail real estate rents for $30+/sq ft.
$15,000 doesn’t come close to covering the annual depreciation and damage to the park the market causes….which of course is what necessitated the $4.8 MILLION renovation.
I smell a puff piece…
The move to Pine Street will be devastating for the vendors that are able to make the move, let alone the vendors for which there wasn’t space, due to the diminished walk-by/convenience crowds. There aren’t people walking down Pine St just for the heck of it.
There’s less than 3 weeks to go and they haven’t planned out a shuttle? It ain’t gonna happen at this point.
And hoping to draw from surrounding neighborhoods? It’s smack-dab in the middle of an industrial area!
@PacoDefrancis I believe there is inherent value in the Farmer’s Market as an economic outlet for local producers and a resource for local products to consumers that make up for the lack of direct monetary payment to the city. Isn’t the point of public parks to provide such a venue, not to make profit?
Paco DeFrancis – get a grip. What a huge loss for those who depended on it- IN DOWNTOWN-
I would have closed Bank Street and if need be Saint Paul street every Saturday morning and put the market there for the summer…Pine Street is fine but will cut the number of visitors by at least 50%
Has nobody in this thread ever been to Art Hop or ArtsRiot’s Truck Stop or just, like, any weekend night at Citizen Cider? This corridor has no trouble attracting people, and this will be a fine replacement for the time being.
The Farmer’s Market can come back when Miro is done paving over City Hall Park. They can even wash their produce and veggies in the flashy water spout thingy. It will be so vibrant and modern, how can anyone resist?
However , there is a big open spot downtown at the moment . . . hmmmmmm.
Borg, the move is only about 5 blocks away from downtown. The downtown people can enjoy some extra excercise as well
After arguing that farmers market activity compacted soil and caused damage to trees in City Hall Park, making it necessary to remove trees, now we learn that City proposes bringing the market back — with reduced rate for three years. Thereafter the fee will be the same as before, which was not adequate to cover required maintenance and supervision.
City Hall Park has been repurposed as paved commercial space. Voters were denied opportunity to vote on this plan, which is being challenged in court. The former City Council prevented citizen initiative access to the ballot. Voters subsequently elected new council members, and next election will be an opportunity to elect more. But unless the court challenge prevails, it will be too late to keep the park green.