ADVERTISEMENT
The Fast Observer
  • Home
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
  • Video
Friday, May 20, 2022
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT
The Fast Observer
  • Home
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
  • Video
Friday, May 20, 2022
No Result
View All Result
The Fast Observer
No Result
View All Result
ADVERTISEMENT
Home Tech TECHCRUNCH

Hacking lettuce for taste and profit – TechCrunch

TECHCRUNCH.COM by TECHCRUNCH.COM
October 27, 2021
in TECHCRUNCH
0
Hacking lettuce for taste and profit – TechCrunch
0
SHARES
8
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter
ADVERTISEMENT


“The first thing you notice is just the smell,” chief science officer of Bowery Farming Henry Sztul says excitedly. “It’s got that smell, right?”

There’s a kind of visceral sense memory that hits you as you enter Farm Zero, a Proustian moment that overtakes the senses after years of living in a major city. It smells like greenhouses and grow rooms: fresh, alive and a dramatic contrast from the world immediately outside the building here in Kearny, New Jersey.

Years of indoor farming breakthroughs have made it possible for leafy greens to be grown at larger and larger scales — and, eventually, at a profit.

As I walk through Bowery Farming’s three active vertical farm and research facilities, my mind is teeming with questions about climate change and the potential of sustainable vertical farming. Yet, when it comes right down to it, it’s the taste and, yes, that smell that will drive the company’s — and the industry’s — success.

We’re decked out in clean room coveralls and hairnets. Watches and jewelry are off, the soles of our shoes still damp from standing in sanitizing solution. “In here, we have a fully enclosed environment,” Sztul continues. “We control temperature, humidity, CO2, water flow, nutrients, light levels. When I say light levels I mean the color of the light spectrum, the intensity of the light, the photo period, the day/night cycles.”

Unlike traditional software products, inventing produce is an entirely different endeavor. Perturbations in the inputs of Bowery’s vertical farm can lead to radically different flavor profiles in the leafy greens it distributes.

In the second part of this TC-1, I’ll look at how the company experiments in Farm Zero and what it dubs Farm X, how it develops new produce lines as it expands outside of leafy greens and how it transforms farm work for the urban 21st century while scaling up at its newer Farm One production facility.

Tilling concrete

The smell is the first sense to hit, but it’s the visual that really grabs you. Right in front of me are the grow systems that give vertical farming its name. It’s a kind of scaffolding setup with row atop row of leafy greens nestled in long trays and lit by bright LEDs. PVC piping snakes up and down, delivering the water that cycles through the systems — saving 15 to 20 million gallons of water per farm over traditional growing each year, according to the company’s estimates.

Grow trays bask in light at Bowery Farming. Image Credits: Brian Heater

This entire room is part of one closed irrigation system, circulating the nutrient-rich liquid to all the plants. Bowery says that even the water lost from natural plant perspiration can be captured with its HVAC system and recirculated back into the loop.

The glowing lights are a stark contrast to the gloomy industrial park outside, but even indoors, the visual is somewhat difficult to reconcile. The little pods of bright green vegetation exist in almost a laboratory setting, a strange juxtaposition of the natural and the synthetic that speaks to the heart of what vertical farming attempts to do — effectively hacking 10,000 years of agricultural knowledge.



Source link

SOURCE

  • TECHCRUNCH.COM

    TechCrunch is an American online newspaper focusing on high tech and startup companies. Reporting on the business of technology, startups, venture capital funding, and Silicon Valley.

    View all posts

Previous Post

Sameer Wankhede to remain investigation officer in drugs on cruise case: NCB on inquiry against him

Next Post

An Authentic Banga Soup (Ofe Akwu) with Thinned Banga Recipe from Ify’s Kitchen

TECHCRUNCH.COM

TECHCRUNCH.COM

TechCrunch is an American online newspaper focusing on high tech and startup companies. Reporting on the business of technology, startups, venture capital funding, and Silicon Valley.

Next Post
An Authentic Banga Soup (Ofe Akwu) with Thinned Banga Recipe from Ify’s Kitchen

An Authentic Banga Soup (Ofe Akwu) with Thinned Banga Recipe from Ify's Kitchen

Plugin Install : Widget Tab Post needs JNews - View Counter to be installed
  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
How to dress up to a Brunch

How to dress up to a Brunch

March 12, 2022
3 Ways to Invest in Ethereum Without Buying ETH

3 Ways to Invest in Ethereum Without Buying ETH

February 4, 2022
These are the African countries that censor internet the most — Quartz Africa

These are the African countries that censor internet the most — Quartz Africa

May 13, 2022
Breaking news; Nabimanya’s Kyaddala series tops 9th edition of Uganda film Festival Nominations

Breaking news; Nabimanya’s Kyaddala series tops 9th edition of Uganda film Festival Nominations

May 18, 2022
HobyClean: The revolutionary technology digitizing the global laundry industry

HobyClean: The revolutionary technology digitizing the global laundry industry

May 19, 2022
Not rape but bad touches – Sheebah on her sexual violation incident

Not rape but bad touches – Sheebah on her sexual violation incident

May 19, 2022
Cindy laughs-off “UMA Presidential elections malpractice” rumors

Cindy laughs-off “UMA Presidential elections malpractice” rumors

May 19, 2022
Nigeria’s central bank releases draft guidelines for open banking — Quartz Africa

Nigeria’s central bank releases draft guidelines for open banking — Quartz Africa

May 19, 2022
ADVERTISEMENT

Disclaimer; All aggregated content on this site is owned by the original authors NOT The Fast Observer

© 2021 reserved by THE FAST OBSERVER a Product of  ALFA MEDIA SMC LTD

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Entertainment
  • Tech
  • Video

© 2021 The Fast Observer www.fastobserver.com by The Fast Observer.