Vertical Farming Outside
In fact 1 acre of an indoor area offers equivalent production to at least 4 6 acres of outdoor.
Vertical farming outside. The term goes back to 1915 though it took a century for the first commercial vertical farms to be built. In vertical farming one acre of indoor space is the equivalent of 4 6 outdoor acres. Vertical farming allows us to produce more crops from the same square footage of growing area. It often incorporates controlled environment agriculture which aims to optimize plant growth and soilless farming techniques such as hydroponics aquaponics and aeroponics.
Vertical farming is the practice of growing crops in vertically stacked layers. Increased and year round crop production. Vertical farming of this sort is not of itself a new idea. A busby alberta farmer uses a vertical farming system to grow leafy produce all year round.
Cities it takes advantage of economies of scale in a way no other farming operation can. 4 a lot less space is necessary to produce the same amount of produce particularly useful in cities where outdoor land is limited. Vertical gardening is nothing more than using vertical space to grow vegetables or herbs or flowers even root crops often using containers that hang on a sunny wall. Some common choices of structures to house vertical farming systems include buildings shipping containers tunnels and abandoned mine shafts.
The efficient use of vertical farming may perhaps play a significant role in preparing for such a challenge. 11 2 indoor vertical farming 11 3 outdoor vertical farming 12 by technology 12 1 market overview 12 2 lighting devices 12 3 software 12 4 growth mechanism component 12 5 climate control 12 6. Offering the ability to grow more crops in a controlled environment inside major distributions hubs i e. Outdoor grown lettuce was two and a half times more carbon efficient in the winter 2 62 kg co2 per kg lettuce when compared to vertically grown lettuce.
Traditional gardeners have done similar things with climbing plants like squashes and beans for centuries by building trellises.