Trinity Ave Park Project

Your awesome Tagline

123 notes

gardensinunexpectedplaces:

Via contained:

Localize It: PodPonics Grows High-Tech Organic Produce In Shipping Containers — Fast Company

 As fuel prices go up, the cost of shipping produce thousands of miles away rises accordingly. In the past few years, a number of companies have attempted to capitalize on the increasing hunger for locally produced food — we’ve seen rooftop farming startup BrightFarms and Brooklyn hydroponic farming startup Gotham Greens, just to a name a couple. 
[Atlanta-based] PodPonics started in 2010 when founder Matt Liotta — a serial entrepreneur who has launched Internet, software, and telecom startups — noticed that demand significantly outstripped supply in the local food business. “[My work] in Internet, telecom, and agriculture is all pretty similar in that the goal was to find a mature industry and come up with a disruptive technology,” he says. “If you wanted to produce fresh produce at the point of consumption in a way that was economically viable, what would you have to invent to do it?”
Liotta decided to use recycled shipping containers as “grow pods,” which are outfitted with organic hydroponic nutrient solutions; computer-controlled environmental systems to regulate temperature, humidity, pH levels, and CO2; and lights that emit specific spectrums at different points in the day. The system provides the exact amount of water, lights, and nutrients that a crop requires—so there is no wasted energy (though the pods are still hooked up to the power grid). In a 320 square foot area, PodPonics can produce an acre’s worth of produce. The pods can be stacked on top of each other for more efficient use of space.

Full story: Fast Company. Photo via PodPonics.

gardensinunexpectedplaces:

Via contained:

Localize It: PodPonics Grows High-Tech Organic Produce In Shipping Containers — Fast Company

 As fuel prices go up, the cost of shipping produce thousands of miles away rises accordingly. In the past few years, a number of companies have attempted to capitalize on the increasing hunger for locally produced food — we’ve seen rooftop farming startup BrightFarms and Brooklyn hydroponic farming startup Gotham Greens, just to a name a couple. 

[Atlanta-based] PodPonics started in 2010 when founder Matt Liotta — a serial entrepreneur who has launched Internet, software, and telecom startups — noticed that demand significantly outstripped supply in the local food business. “[My work] in Internet, telecom, and agriculture is all pretty similar in that the goal was to find a mature industry and come up with a disruptive technology,” he says. “If you wanted to produce fresh produce at the point of consumption in a way that was economically viable, what would you have to invent to do it?”

Liotta decided to use recycled shipping containers as “grow pods,” which are outfitted with organic hydroponic nutrient solutions; computer-controlled environmental systems to regulate temperature, humidity, pH levels, and CO2; and lights that emit specific spectrums at different points in the day. The system provides the exact amount of water, lights, and nutrients that a crop requires—so there is no wasted energy (though the pods are still hooked up to the power grid). In a 320 square foot area, PodPonics can produce an acre’s worth of produce. The pods can be stacked on top of each other for more efficient use of space.

Full story: Fast Company. Photo via PodPonics.

Filed under repurposed shipping container shipping containers garden gardens gardening PodPonics urban farms urban farming

  1. restaurant-checklists-813 reblogged this from gardensinunexpectedplaces
  2. josy-adams reblogged this from contained
  3. jmek reblogged this from gardensinunexpectedplaces
  4. mohamed-ali-said reblogged this from gardensinunexpectedplaces
  5. decodeencode reblogged this from gardensinunexpectedplaces
  6. tbwork reblogged this from gardensinunexpectedplaces
  7. bokashi-composting reblogged this from gardensinunexpectedplaces
  8. la-crawfish reblogged this from gardensinunexpectedplaces
  9. trinityavepark reblogged this from gardensinunexpectedplaces
  10. 191t reblogged this from dizzymaiden
  11. estudiobnkr reblogged this from joinakibbutz and added:
    Hydroponics in shipping containers (PodPonics) Localize It: PodPonics Grows High-Tech Organic Produce In Shipping...
  12. anarcho-furious reblogged this from joinakibbutz
  13. mauricesmall reblogged this from joinakibbutz
  14. actualhomewreckersteverogers reblogged this from 8bitian and added:
    I really want to start a hydroponic garden
  15. 8bitian reblogged this from joinakibbutz and added:
    While I do like nifty hydroponics setups like this from a technical and logistical perspective, I’m not a fan of how...
  16. joinakibbutz reblogged this from unconsumption
  17. heavyheadedastronaut reblogged this from ohnodeadpixel
  18. ohnodeadpixel reblogged this from unconsumption
  19. sarabilove reblogged this from realcleverscience
  20. tylrd reblogged this from contained
  21. catastrophe-urben reblogged this from gardensinunexpectedplaces and added:
    Hmmmmmmm
  22. helloimcool reblogged this from realcleverscience
  23. sistersleep reblogged this from gardensinunexpectedplaces
  24. awasjackall reblogged this from realcleverscience
  25. sarahlaughsallthetime reblogged this from realcleverscience
  26. pigeonsandpomegranates reblogged this from realcleverscience
  27. conjuringseed reblogged this from realcleverscience and added:
    IL’YA LOOKIT LOOKIT!! :D
  28. realcleverscience reblogged this from jamessteiner and added:
    unconsumption: gardensinunexpectedplaces: contained:...Relevant to my recent
  29. jamessteiner reblogged this from unconsumption and added:
    Cool
  30. doorjambs reblogged this from gardensinunexpectedplaces