Nora Kelly Manicured rurality in the East End of Long Island evokes images of green lawns, trimmed hedges, and ornamental flower gardens: fragile recreations of English gardens that require constant irrigation, trimming, and chemical maintenance. While visible lawn care across many yards constructs the idea of a human “neighborhood,” sterilized soil free of insects, microbes, and weeds signify a lack of faith in interspecies coexistence. Under what conditions, then, can we speculate upon a future in which drought-resistant grasses replace turf, aquifers are not polluted by fertilizers and herbicides, and the decades-long downward trajectory of bird populations reverses? Playing on human affinities for competition and surveillance, this project imagines a future in which landscapers become stewards of the Interspecies Neighborhood Watch, a home security and landscaping system designed to maximize biodiversity, human pleasure, and circularity while minimizing manual labor and material extraction.