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Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

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Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby Bas » Tue 19 Jun 2007, 13:43:05

Just read this article on BBC news:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '.')....And so every morsel, every bite of food New Yorkers munch through every day must be trucked, shipped or flown in, from across the country, and across the world.

Now though, scientists at Columbia University are proposing an alternative. Their vision of the future is one in which the skyline of New York and other cities include a new kind of skyscaper: the "vertical farm".

The idea is simple enough. Imagine a 30-storey building with glass walls, topped off with a huge solar panel.

On each floor there would be giant planting beds, indoor fields in effect.

There would be a sophisticated irrigation system.


BBC News linky

Though it solves some of the problems we discuss on this board, my gut tells me this will never work. Let's pick it apart.
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby RonMN » Tue 19 Jun 2007, 14:02:29

It'll work...But only with abundant, cheap energy. :)
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby Bas » Tue 19 Jun 2007, 14:14:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('RonMN', 'I')t'll work...But only with abundant, cheap energy. :)


well, they are actually saving energy by not having to transport food into the cities anymore. Also plants are only about 1% efficient with sunlight, so in theory a 30% efficient solar panel could supply 30 floors of plants with only that frequency of light that the plants can use.

Still the capital investment required seems huge to me compared to the expected returns, unless of course, food prices rise dramatically, and that's actually quite reasonable to expect in the future, especially in the big cities.
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby Cobra_Strike » Tue 19 Jun 2007, 14:14:19

Hmmm....will this be hand farming? Heavy farm equipment cold be problematic with fumes and such. Soil is a problem, would it be hydroponic? I can see how that might be workable, and I would like a office complex with growing things. Assuming that the food it produced payed off the structure I am not sure there is anything really wrong with it other the the growing cattle bit.

I think it could be done, but should it be done? I don't know.
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby Hawkcreek » Tue 19 Jun 2007, 14:34:57

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Last edited by Hawkcreek on Tue 21 Aug 2007, 22:00:44, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby Bas » Tue 19 Jun 2007, 14:45:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Hawkcreek', 'I') was looking at this article also. If they have a bldg of 300 feet in diameter (couldn't go more and have any light at all to the inner portions), the would have about 50 acres total. A minimum of 10 percent would be unusable because of equipment needs and dead space, so they might have a 45 acre farm. Land in NYC would cost a fortune, and I think the building would cost at least 2-300 million.
It looks to me like they would be buying farmland for somewhere in the neighborhood of 5 - 10 million an acre.
May be a cool idea, but I will bet my favorite pistol against a nickel that it will not be built.


They'd probably be built on an old rusting industrial plot of land instead of manhattan. Still the cost of the building itself (millions if not tens of millions) seems to me to big of an investment in a time when we'll need all of our resources to built new energy infrastructure like solar.
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby Madpaddy » Tue 19 Jun 2007, 14:46:54

Well as a very rough guide, commercial construction over here costs about €2,000 per square metre of floor space. Now whatever size the building is say about 25% of the space will have to be used for services, access paths etc. That makes our 1 sq m into 0.75 sq m of useable space. Pick lettuce as a fairly average plant. A lettuce plant cost about €0.50 to buy. Using the square foot gardening method you can grow 4 lettuce per sq foot or 36 per square metre or 27 per 0.75 sq metre. 27 x 0.5 = €13.5 of food worth per sq metre.

€2,000 / 13.5 = 148 growing seasons.

Using indoors and solar lighting we could expect 3 growing seasons per year. 148/3 = 50 year payback.

As food prices increase, this figure reduces. Of course the plants, especially ones like lettuce could be grown in tiers so you could have mutliple racks of lettuce in 1 sq m of floor space or dozens even hundreds of plants. Sounds very feasible to me.

I apologise in advance for my simplification of this and fully expect to get my ass ripped apart by other more informed people here.....

I'm bending over right now.
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby Bas » Tue 19 Jun 2007, 15:15:36

I think at least 50% of the price of lettuce goes to the middleman and taxes etc. So you'd better make that a 100 years to pay for paying back. And then we still have to think about the upkeep of the thing, labor costs etc. Nobody invests in anything that has a longer payback then ten years, so I guess you'd have to look at lettuce of 10 Euro before these things will get built, and I don't see that happening even with PO.

The most probable scenario in which this was to become reality is a situation in which we have (near) free energy in the form of fusion and a serious overpopulation/environmental problem forcing us to go this way.
Last edited by Bas on Tue 19 Jun 2007, 15:19:17, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby canis_lupus » Tue 19 Jun 2007, 15:18:05

Fascinating idea, I'm surprised it hasn't come up sooner.

It would depend on the foods grown -- the more space they take up, the less return received. I like the racks idea -- figure 10' or 12' ceilings...hm.

Here in Chicago there are plenty of derelict buildings that could be converted. Use the fire sprinklers for water? Trap rainwater on the roof to supplement fresh water and water the building downward from floor to floor? Use waste from nearby buildings for compost?

I think it could be done. Ballsy, buy I think it could be done. Completely reworks the idea of a farmer's market...:)
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby FireJack » Tue 19 Jun 2007, 15:59:08

The idea of a verticle farm has been dicussed on this forum many times. A giant greenhouse would be better.
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby eric_b » Tue 19 Jun 2007, 17:19:43

What struck me immediately is there's no way they could extract enough energy from one rooftop solar panel to power the lighting for every floor, let alone the other electric needs. Lighting is a big expense for indoor grow operations, especially plants that need something approximating high calorie sunshine. In fact I doubt they could get enough electricity to reliably power one floor. To grow quickly many crops require powerful lighting, like high output fluorescents or HPS/metal halide. You can't grow crops efficiently under energy efficient office lighting.

It would make more sense to design the building to use the sunlight directly.. but this would only work at high latitude locations (like the UK) where the sun never gets very high in the sky (that way every floor would get some light, but only the ones facing south).

If there were an alternate source of electricity, like a nuke plant, it might be a viable idea. So I think it's a neat idea but a non-starter, at least using solar power.

{EDIT - just took a closer look at the article, and there's NO WAY you're going to get enough power from one rooftop solar panel to power the lighting and other energy requirements for a 30 STORY building.. lol I like the cute artist rendering of how the building might look tho..}
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby steam_cannon » Tue 19 Jun 2007, 19:29:07

The ultimate Doomer Castle!

Image

The question has come up a number of times, how do you protect your farm in the event of a crash? Amusingly, these designs look an answer to that, doomer castle farms! Lets say Donald Trump was a doomer, I can imagine him owning a protected hydroponics skyscraper castle... I don't see it as being better then a functional farm, but I do think this could be used to give a few elites some breathing room as the climate changes and as other factors come into play. For example: This could insulate elites from Farm Raiders, which is a common result of economic and famine related chaos.

"ABOUT 300 white Zimbabwean women and children were evacuated yesterday from a besieged farming district by convoy and airlift as looting and violence reached new heights." 12/08/2001
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jh ... wzim12.xml

The biggest reason for wheat moving north on the map below is because of lack of available water, AKA projections of the South turning into a dust-bowl. So perhaps in the future, farmers who still farm in the south will use reflective greenhouses to keep in water and reflect the sun. Not as effective as a nice large self irrigated field, but farms that still have food will still have value, so I could see people needing to implement something like this...

Image
http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2006/1 ... to-canada/

greenhouse shade
Image

Also, I don't believe a solar panel on the roof would work very well so I am thinking coal or nuclear... But if solar works, great.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('canis_lupus', 'F')ascinating idea, I'm surprised it hasn't come up sooner.
Google "japan vertical farm" or "japan hydroponics"

Links

Farm thrives in city basement
http://www.foothillhydroponics.com/news.php

Vertical Farming
http://www.treehugger.com/files/2005/06 ... rmin_1.php

http://allhatnocattle.net/vertical_lettuce.jpg

http://www.verticalfarm.com/
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby nocar » Wed 20 Jun 2007, 08:23:13

As an enthusiastic and sometimes overly optimistic hobby gardener, I have learned many lessons about growing veggies the hard way. Strong direct LIGHT is an absolute necessity. Things can grow inside, but do better outdoors - but on high lattitudes like mine (Stockholm Sweden, 59 north) things mainly grow May-Aug. NOTHING will grow without strong artificial light (and indoor for temperatur) Nov-Feb. (You can get things to germinate and get their first leaves by using the stored energy in the seed, but they will not grow further)

TEMPerature is essential - plants may have different requiremnts, but generally 12-28 C is necessary for growing. Many veggies die at first frost, some can survive a few degrees below freezing. For me, things rarely die of heat, but things like radishes, lettuce, spinach still can get destroyed by bolting or getting bitter. Greenhouses easily get too hot, as do hotter climates than mine.

Plants do not like chlorinated water - rainwater is preferable.

Roofs of city buildings certainly are possible places to grow things, and you will have no problem with deer or rabbits, or slugs probably. Birds and flying insects are a different story.

Balconies and window plantings (outside is much better, if you can prevent potted plats falling down on people's heads) are possible, too. In a city, of course, buildings are often shaded by other buildings, or face the wrong way, so not all windows can be used.

Plants may only utilize 1 percent of the energy of the light (I think I have seen other numbers, up to 4 percent), but they certainly can not grow in weak light.

In highrise office buildings with glass walls and AirCondtioning it should be possible to grow veggies by the windows part of the year, enough for a little supplement to the office workers lunches. Remember that a head of lettuce takes months to grow.

Veggies generally have stricter requirements for light and temp that houseplants for decoration.

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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby snowshoegal » Wed 20 Jun 2007, 16:06:28

That glass pyramid hotel in Vegas would work. (The Luxor??) It would capture all kinds of sunlight. The hookers you guys spoke of in another thread could do the weeding. :wink:
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby Madpaddy » Wed 20 Jun 2007, 17:08:28

I like the way you're thinking snowshoegal.

They would have to do the weeding before the other activities mentioned could take place. The last thing we need is stoned prostitutes pulling up leaf beet seedlings.
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby Ludi » Wed 20 Jun 2007, 17:43:25

Keeping the plant-growing areas on the outer, sunside of taller buildings (not skyscrapers, which are just plain not sustainable without cheap energy) and having living quarters behind, could be a more practical way of managing instead of trying to provide artificial light. The plants could be organised so shade lovers could be at the back, those that need the most light be at the front.


The book "Solviva" has many designs for greenhouse dwellings.

http://www.solviva.com/index.htm
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby eric_b » Thu 21 Jun 2007, 03:36:11

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nocar', 'A')s an enthusiastic and sometimes overly optimistic hobby gardener, I have learned many lessons about growing veggies the hard way. Strong direct LIGHT is an absolute necessity. Things can grow inside, but do better outdoors - but on high lattitudes like mine (Stockholm Sweden, 59 north) things mainly grow May-Aug. NOTHING will grow without strong artificial light (and indoor for temperatur) Nov-Feb. (You can get things to germinate and get their first leaves by using the stored energy in the seed, but they will not grow further)

TEMPerature is essential - plants may have different requiremnts, but generally 12-28 C is necessary for growing. Many veggies die at first frost, some can survive a few degrees below freezing. For me, things rarely die of heat, but things like radishes, lettuce, spinach still can get destroyed by bolting or getting bitter. Greenhouses easily get too hot, as do hotter climates than mine.

(...)

Veggies generally have stricter requirements for light and temp that houseplants for decoration.

nocar


Yes, exactly. The fact this idea sounds plausible is an example of the severe 'energy ignorance' most people have.

There's a lot of radiant energy in sunlight - close to a 1000 watts for every square meter on a bright day. If you think about it's not likely that a solar panel could supply enough power to supply ONE floor on the 30 story building. Most panels are not more than 10-15% efficient at converting sunlight to electricity, so right away you loose over 80% of your energy at the solar panels. Then you loose more energy at the lamp/bulb end. Energy efficient lighting is not more than about 40% efficient at converting electricity into light. You'd be better off using the sunlight directly. Perhaps using something like lightpipes you could divide the sunlight out between a few floors (certainly not 30!)

I consulted my trusty 'Marijuana Question?, ASK ED' grow bible to get an estimate of the energy needs per square foot to approximate sunshine. Using metal halide lighting, 1000 watt bulbs (40% conversion efficiency), you need one of these for every 50-100 square feet. Yeah. Go figure. I'm certain there are some crops that would not require as much, but it probably would not amount to more than a factor of two difference.

This jives with with my own experience growing weed indoors (this is years ago now, don't come over and bust down my door). I was able to grow about 4-5 plants using 400 watts of high pressure sodium and metal halide lighting. Only enough light for 10 square feet of floor space! And I could only do this in the Winter as that amounted to a 400 watt space heater in my room. It almost doubled my electric bill to run those lights 12-18 hours a day. Those plants are hungry mommas. Even then the lower parts of the plants (beyond a yard from the lights) only get enough light to grow slowly.

Basically the less light the plants get the slower they grow, and below a certain level they do not do well.

So there's no way you could get enough power from a rooftop solar panel for all the light/heat/pumping/whatever energy needs. Not even close. Powering the building using grid power is an abomination. Instead of taking carbon out of the atmosphere growing plants you're adding more.

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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby DavidFolks » Thu 21 Jun 2007, 07:22:49

I don't think the solar array was necessarily meant to provide for all the energy needs. I imagine heating could be passive solar, with a huge thermal mass to store heat. A structure at lattitudes around the 49th parallel with 60% glass on the southern exposure will experience a net gain in heat over winter. (Assuming proper insulation, etc, etc.)

Light could be just ambient daylight, you might want to upgrade your glass. I've eaten lettuce from window box cold frames in February, above the 49th parallel.

Using solar to run pumps and gravity to handle irrigation...

Of course, you could make something like this labour intensive rather than energy intensive. Has the benefits of using less electricity, and you would derive the social benefits of providing useful employment.

Using human labour, rather than automated systems, would allow for cultivating crops that had higher nutritional value and better taste. You wouldn't be limited to high yield, short grow cycle, and bred for transport products.

Professor Despommier is pursuing a neat idea. It will be interesting to see how things work out.
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby eric_b » Thu 21 Jun 2007, 15:00:58

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('DavidFolks', 'I') don't think the solar array was necessarily meant to provide for all the energy needs. I imagine heating could be passive solar, with a huge thermal mass to store heat. A structure at lattitudes around the 49th parallel with 60% glass on the southern exposure will experience a net gain in heat over winter. (Assuming proper insulation, etc, etc.)


At close to 50 degrees latitute there's not nearly enough energy from sunshine to heat a 30 story building, much less supply its electric needs. That assumes it's even sunny and not cloudy for days to weeks on end, like it can be around here. I have trouble imagining a 'net heat gain', whatever you mean by that, over the Winter, especially for highrise.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('DavidFolks', '
')Light could be just ambient daylight, you might want to upgrade your glass. I've eaten lettuce from window box cold frames in February, above the 49th parallel.


Sure, lettuce. How many calories are in lettuce? It's probably negative calories as your body expends more energy to process it than it gets back - like a glass of ice water. If you want to raise a seed crop that actually has some calories - grain, legumes, fruits, etc, you will have to supplement the weak sunshine found at high latitude locations in the Winter.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('DavidFolks', '
')Using solar to run pumps and gravity to handle irrigation...


...Which is a tiny fraction of the power needs for an indoor grow operation.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('DavidFolks', '
')Of course, you could make something like this labour intensive rather than energy intensive. Has the benefits of using less electricity, and you would derive the social benefits of providing useful employment.

Using human labour, rather than automated systems, would allow for cultivating crops that had higher nutritional value and better taste. You wouldn't be limited to high yield, short grow cycle, and bred for transport products.


What, people riding exercise bicycles with dynamos to supply the needed juice? :-D

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('DavidFolks', '
')Professor Despommier is pursuing a neat idea. It will be interesting to see how things work out.

It's a cute idea, but that's where it ends. Without gobs of energy a big multi-story greenhouse like that will not work, especially in a northern location.
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Re: Skyscraper Farms (What?!)

Postby Judgie » Mon 25 Jun 2007, 05:54:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('eric_b', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('nocar', '
')So there's no way you could get enough power from a rooftop solar panel for all the light/heat/pumping/whatever energy needs. Not even close. Powering the building using grid power is an abomination. Instead of taking carbon out of the atmosphere growing plants you're adding more.

Image


No Eric, you're wrong! exponential advancement in the development and manufacturing of solar panels will make it a cinch to power a 30 floor sky farm with only a rooftop of solar panels. And it'll be ultra-affordable as well. Everyone will be able to get in on that act!. Omnitir is working on it as we speak! have faith, my son!.

/SARCASM OFF :-D
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