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Is the rise garden completely gone

Checked on November 24, 2025
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Executive summary

Available sources do not mention an entity called "the rise garden" or whether it has closed; reporting returned by the search results focuses on rising bankruptcy filings across sectors in 2025 rather than any specific business named "The Rise Garden" (not found in current reporting). The data show business bankruptcies and some industry-specific spikes — e.g., business filings rose 22.1% in the year ending Dec. 31, 2024 and overall bankruptcy filings rose by double-digit percentages into 2025 — useful context if your question is whether a retailer or small business has failed amid a broader wave of bankruptcies [1] [2] [3].

1. Why your specific query about “the rise garden” can’t be answered from these sources

I searched the provided reporting and none of the items reference an organization, store, brand, or website named “the rise garden”; therefore I cannot confirm whether it is “completely gone” — available sources do not mention “the rise garden” (not found in current reporting). The results instead center on national bankruptcy trends and notable retail bankruptcies across 2024–2025 [4] [1] [2] [5].

2. National bankruptcy context that might explain local closures

Bankruptcy filings climbed noticeably in this period: the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts reported annual filings of 517,308 for the year ending Dec. 31, 2024, up from 452,990 the prior year, and business filings rose 22.1% in that interval [1]. By mid‑2025 the 12‑month totals continued to increase, with filings totaling 542,529 in the year ending June 30, 2025, and business filings up modestly year‑over‑year in that period as well [2]. These broad trends mean more businesses — from retailers to farms to solar companies — have been vulnerable to closure or restructuring [5] [6].

3. Which industries showed pronounced distress in 2024–2025

Reporting highlights several hard‑hit sectors: casual dining faced multiple high‑profile bankruptcies in 2024 and carried pressure into 2025; retail and certain national service providers also figured among notable failures in 2025 compendia [5] [4]. The solar sector and some national installers experienced failures tied to installation quality and aggressive sales models, illustrating how industry dynamics beyond macroeconomic stressors can cause individual brands to disappear [6].

4. Farm bankruptcies as a separate example of concentrated stress

Agriculture saw a sharp rise in Chapter 12 (farm) filings in early 2025: some reporting says Chapter 12 filings were up roughly 70% year‑to‑date compared with the same period in 2024, and several outlets flagged farm bankruptcies surpassing 2024 totals even before mid‑2025 [7] [8]. Local ripple effects from such sectoral distress show how some communities lose businesses quickly even when national statistics mask heterogeneity [8] [7].

5. What you should do to verify the fate of a specific business

Because the provided sources don’t mention “the rise garden,” you’ll need targeted local checks: search state corporate registries, county court bankruptcy dockets, local news archives, the business’s official website or social pages, and recent customer reviews. If it’s a retail storefront, municipal property records or landlord filings can also reveal closures or eviction actions. The national bankruptcy numbers provide context but do not substitute for business‑specific records (not found in current reporting; [1]; p1_s4).

6. How to interpret broader data if you find a matching closure

If you discover that an entity called “The Rise Garden” has closed or filed for bankruptcy, place that result in the broader frame: business filings were elevated across 2024–2025, driven by higher interest rates, inflation, labor costs, and shifting consumer habits — factors repeatedly cited in legal and business reporting about the 2024–2025 bankruptcy wave [5]. But industry‑specific issues (e.g., operational missteps, product or service problems) often explain individual failures alongside macro pressure [6] [4].

Limitations and next steps: The reporting you provided contains extensive national bankruptcy trend data but does not include any item referencing “the rise garden.” If you can supply a local news link, a homepage URL, or the location of the business you mean, I can analyze those specific documents and tell you whether the available reporting shows it has permanently closed or is undergoing restructuring (not found in current reporting; [1]; p1_s4).

Want to dive deeper?
What happened to The Rise community garden and when did it close?
Who owns the land where The Rise garden was located and were there redevelopment plans?
Were permits, code violations, or legal disputes involved in the removal of The Rise garden?
How have local residents and organizers responded or tried to preserve The Rise garden?
Are there replacement green spaces or community garden initiatives after The Rise garden's removal?