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A farm deep inside a Brooklyn warehouse may lead the way to large-scale urban agriculture

April 11, 2016 โ€” Hereโ€™s one way to grow food in an urban environment: Raise a school of tilapia in a tank. Filter out the nitrogen-rich waste, and let naturally occurring bacteria transform it from ammonia into nitrate. Run that naturally derived fertilizer beneath the roots of greens, herbs and peppers. Let the veggies flourish beneath LED lights. Harvest the vegetables. Later, harvest the fish. Cook and serve.

Known as aquaponics, this complicated but efficient ecosystem is the latest attempt at making agriculture commercially viable in New York Cityโ€”even though it has a spotty history, a not-quite-proven track record and plenty of skeptics.

โ€œWe do aquaponics for the quality of produce it yields,โ€ said Jason Green, CEO and co-founder of Edenworks, an emerging commercial aquaponics company in East Williamsburg, Brooklyn, that recently secured a commitment to supply baby greens and microgreens to Whole Foods Market stores in New York City later this year. โ€œOur innovation is that we can do aquaponics cost-effectively, scalably and repeatedly.โ€

Though the premise of mimicking a natural system in a closed environment is ancient, Green says that new technologies including proprietary software, a complex plumbing system and cost-efficient LED lighting, plus a soaring demand for local food, will make fish-fed farms viable on a large scale, even in inner cities. A 2010 report from the New York City Council cited $600 million in unmet demand for regionally grown produce.

โ€œConsumers are very interested in knowing the provenance of their food, and companies are responding to that by setting up systems to produce food in cities,โ€ explained Nevin Cohen, an associate professor of urban food policy at the CUNY School of Public Health.

See the full story at Crainโ€™s New York

A Massive Aquaponic Lettuce And Fish Farm Will Grow In A Brooklyn Warehouse

March 31, 2016 โ€” BROOKLYN, N.Y. โ€” โ€œWe build industrial-scale ecosystems.โ€ So says Jason Green, CEO and co-founder of Edenworks, a Brooklyn-based urban farming startup. Unlike a typical indoor farmโ€”a sterile environment, sometimes run by people in gloves or even by robotsโ€”Edenworks tries to build in as much life as possible.

In their new warehouse, set to open in New York City this summer, fish will grow in tanks, bacteria will turn the fish waste into a rich fertilizer, and plants will use that fertilizer to grow. โ€œThatโ€™s the way the Earth worksโ€”weโ€™ve just turned it into kind of like a manufacturing process, but itโ€™s all based on ecology,โ€ he says.

In a year, the 6,000-square-foot space will produce around 180,000 pounds of salad greens and tilapia for local grocery stores and restaurants.

The startup is one of a handful that will open large-scale urban farms this year. Nearby, in Newark, New Jersey, Aerofarms is turning a vacant steel factory into a 69,000-square-foot โ€œaeroponicโ€ farm. Gotham Greens just opened the worldโ€™s largest rooftop greenhouse in Chicago, an addition to the others it runs in New York. FarmedHere, which also runs a large indoor farm in Chicago, plans to open a nationwide network.

Edenworks claims to have an advantage over most of its competitors: because it uses aquaponicsโ€”combining raising fish with plantsโ€”it says the salad greens it grows actually taste better. (FarmedHere also uses aquaponics; most others use hydroponics or aeroponics to pump in a mix of nutrients separately, without using fish)

Read the full story at Fast Company

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