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United Kingdom Science Technology

WWII Bomb Shelter Becomes Hi-Tech Salad Farm 122

asjk points out a story of how a World War II bomb shelter, situated 33 meters beneath the streets of London, has been turned into a high-tech hydroponic farm. "The growing system uses energy-efficient LEDs instead of sun, no pesticides, needs 70 percent less water than growing plants in open fields, and less energy than a greenhouse." The computer-controlled environment is designed to shorten the growth cycle of plants like coriander and radishes. They're currently only using about a quarter of the gear necessary to fill up the shelter, but they can produce 5,000-20,000 kilograms of food per year, depending on what they raise. Co-founder Steven Dring said, "We've got to utilize the spaces we've got. There's a finite amount of land and we can grow salads and herbs — which start losing flavor and quality as soon as you cut them — in warehouses and rooftops in cities near the people who will eat them. Use the rural land for things like carrots, potatoes and livestock."
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WWII Bomb Shelter Becomes Hi-Tech Salad Farm

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  • by EmagGeek ( 574360 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @09:24AM (#50450877) Journal

    The article (or shall I say shameless advertisement) goes out of its way to talk about how much they shower the growing plants with "nutrients," but says not one iota about the nutritional content of the final product and how it compares to organic or conventionally grown produce.

    • by VorpalRodent ( 964940 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @10:00AM (#50451157)
      At a minimum, they're probably providing the plants with electrolytes...it's what plants crave.
    • Trade Secrets and such, I suspect (but then, "nutrients" does sound a lot more palatable than "highly diluted poop".)

      I find that if arable land is the big issue, you could just as easily convert some floor in an office building, or even use the rooftops (though you'd have to figure in temperature and evaporation - but on the plus side you get rain and free sunlight during most of the growing day).

      It's not like going underground is the only solution towards getting more arable land to work with. It's a good

      • I've heard about this project a few times now and one of the big advantages about it being in the shelters is that they provide a constant temperature year round. There is actually quite a bit of money spent with a greenhouse to keep the temperature regulated.

        And if you were just to plant gardens on rooftops then you are at the mercy of the weather and you can't grow during the winter, unless you install greenhouses. That is, of course, the building can take the weight of the gardens in the first place.

        • by dwywit ( 1109409 )

          Exactly. This is London, the climate isn't ideal for year-round outdoor horticulture, and the pollution would make me reluctant to eat food grown outdoors, at least within the M25.

          I'd like to be buying more locally-grown fruit & veg, but the local farmer's market is 1. pathetically small, I suspect the organisers charge too much for a stall, and 2. only run once a month. There's a couple of "box of fruit & veg" schemes, but the quality is very variable.

    • Yea you won't be happy until we have an unsustainable farming methodology that will require knocking down the world forests to feed the population.

      This "Organic" farming, is really a first world problem issue, where we want the status of getting the top quality food, even if we cook out all the flavors and put it in a pizza.

    • The article (or shall I say shameless advertisement) goes out of its way to talk about how much they shower the growing plants with "nutrients," but says not one iota about the nutritional content of the final product and how it compares to organic or conventionally grown produce.

      How could any of these be different? Salad is a living creature, not a dish made by a cook. The only things that can change are the relative abundances of various cell types (and lots of variance there means the salad will simply

    • by Anonymous Coward

      There's no nutritional difference yet shown between organic and conventionally grown foods, so your question boils down to whether there can be a nutritional difference between hydroponically grown foods and foods grown in soil. It would follow that foods grown in different soils could also have different nutritional profiles. We know the latter is true to at least a small extent, so it would follow that the former would be true (the reasons why different soils effect nutrition would apply equally in the hy

  • Same old story... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by __aaclcg7560 ( 824291 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @09:27AM (#50450901)

    Use the rural land for things like carrots, potatoes and livestock.

    Tell that to the real estate developer who wants to build $1B in homes on a flood plain, gives contributions to the politicians to make it happen, and won't be around when rising sea levels wipes out the homes that homeowners will expect taxpayers to pay for.

    • Re:Same old story... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @09:48AM (#50451059)

      Here in the UK, developers are on the hook for flood risk minimisation etc for years afterward, and have to pay a bond which they only get back after so many years without any flood damage occurring in the development - the bond is set at a level where if they spend the money on the flood defences the developer will profit if they get the bond back.

      Plus, "flood plains" are often a misnomer - my house is in a flood plain, except the river is 200 metres away and 8 metres below ground level, and if it flooded then the entire city would be in a heap of trouble. It hasn't flooded in 150 years, and the defences are such that flooding will be done upriver outside the city, but still my house is classed as being on a flood plain...

      • My apartment complex in Silicon Valley is on a flood plain, far away from a nearby creek. However, if the sea level rises by four feet as expected by mid-century, I can fish off my second floor balcony. Not sure if taxpayers will pony up the money for miles of levees.
        • "Flood plains" have nothing to do with sea level rises...

          • The flood plain that my apartment complex sits on drains into the San Francisco Bay Area. If sea level rises, the water level in the bay rises and floods the flood plains. See map in the link below.

            The map clearly shows that a sea level rise of only a few meters would inundate hundreds of square miles of land. San Francisco Bay and San Pablo Bay would enlarge, covering industry, residences and infrastructure. More surprising would be the enormous area of flooding that would occur in the Sacramento Valley. Hundreds of square miles would be underwater there and the intrusion of this salt water would have major environmental impacts.

            http://geology.com/sea-level-rise/san-francisco.shtml [geology.com]

          • "Flood plains" have nothing to do with sea level rises...

            A flood occurs when either water supply is increased or water drainage is decreased (or both) beyond usual variance. If sea levels rise, drainage in low areas is decreased since pushing seawater out of the way slows down rivers. So it seems likely that flood plains will grow upstream and cover new areas, while existing plains get worse and more frequent floods.

    • Stop paying for it then. Don't vote for politicians who promote those views and don't back down from those that call you mean, racist or whatever for not paying for such foolishness.

      The power is in you. You are the one you've been waiting for.
      • The problem is that too many people have a short-term focus and an unwillingness to consider the long-term consequences. Flood plains are called flood plains for a reason. Building houses on a flood plain without paying for flood prevention and requiring homeowners to buy flood insurance is plain stupidity. But, hey, that's a problem for future taxpayers to pay for.
  • ITS PEOPLE!!!!

  • Bullshit (Score:4, Insightful)

    by TheCarp ( 96830 ) <sjc AT carpanet DOT net> on Thursday September 03, 2015 @09:31AM (#50450943) Homepage

    Ok, main place I started being skeptical was the LEDs vs the SUN. Now, MAYBE its possible that the LEDs are efficient enough that the electricity cost of running them is offset by the decreased water, other energy needs, but....

    The sun is a lot of energy and plants convert light to sugar.... they need light, so converting it to something else and back has to be less efficient than letting it shine on them directly. But....

    "no pesticides"....no way. None to start maybe but, plant pests will get in and they will require pesticides to remove. Might get your first crop or two pest free, but without pesticides or a complete sanitary cleanout between crops, its not going to last.

    • Re: Bullshit (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      they need light, so converting it to something else and back has to be less efficient than letting it shine on them directly.

      Plants only absorb light in the red visible spectrum and parts of the ultraviolet spectrum. In principle, we could make farming more effective by absorbing infrared and green light, converting to electricity, and using the electricity to power red light for the plants to absorb.

      • by Khyber ( 864651 )

        "Plants only absorb light in the red visible spectrum and parts of the ultraviolet spectrum"

        Nope. Red and blue are just the quickest to be absorbed, while green actually passes through more easily and bounces around more easily, and primarily powers growth under the canopy. When plants reflect (actually re-transmit) green, you're only seeing certain wavelengths of green coming back at you. That's because there are hundreds to thousands of biological pathways that works with various wavelengths of light, and

    • This isn't an open field, though. There are entry points to the "farm" and if they control what goes in and comes out, and if they keep an eye open for any proliferation of pests and take them out as soon as they show up, it's feasible.
      Like the other guy up there, though, am more interested in the "nutrient" they are using. Unless they are changing the soil regularly or rotating crops, they must be adding something to the soil, and whatever it is, I doubt it will be very "organic".
      • This isn't an open field, though. There are entry points to the "farm" and if they control what goes in and comes out, and if they keep an eye open for any proliferation of pests and take them out as soon as they show up, it's feasible.

        It isn't, you will need something eventually. That something might be organic and plant-derived, but if you're not keeping absolute clean-room procedures going then you will certainly bring something in on you eventually. Nothing short of bunny suits and chemical showers can ensure that.

        Like the other guy up there, though, am more interested in the "nutrient" they are using. Unless they are changing the soil regularly or rotating crops, they must be adding something to the soil, and whatever it is, I doubt it will be very "organic".

        They're not even using soil! You can do organic gardening without soil just by making compost tea and flowing that as your nutrient. The most common feedstock is horse poop. All you need to keep the reaction going is an aqua

        • They're not even using soil! You can do organic gardening without soil just by making compost tea and flowing that as your nutrient. The most common feedstock is horse poop. All you need to keep the reaction going is an aquarium pump and a bubbler stone.

          My grandma, who was an amazing gardener, kept a barrel out near the barn. It was half full of chickenshit. The barrel was allowed to fill with rainwater to the top, and every so often, she'd dip an old tin pan in it, and lay some of this chickenshit tea on the plants.

          Which was of course, really smart, since chicken manure is really "hot" and needs a lot of diluting before putting it on the plants.

          As a wee kid, I was suitably grossed out by the whole thing. Fortunately I forgot about it when we ate her

    • by Anonymous Coward

      What plant pests exist 33 meters underground in the middle of London? None. Insects aren't created from the ether.

      • Re:Bullshit (Score:5, Funny)

        by VorpalRodent ( 964940 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @10:05AM (#50451199)

        Insects aren't created from the ether.

        Spontaneous generation says otherwise, though I appreciate that someone at least finally acknowledges the existence of the ether.

        • Insects aren't created from the ether.

          Spontaneous generation says otherwise, though I appreciate that someone at least finally acknowledges the existence of the ether.

          Well, it was ether that, or we'd have to listen to you complaining all day...

    • Re:Bullshit (Score:5, Informative)

      by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @09:55AM (#50451111) Homepage

      So, I had to type "led gree" into Google to have it auto-suggest "led greenhouse lights", and get hits from Amazon, Home Depot, Phillips, and a bunch of other sites.

      Maybe your current knowledge of LEDs for growing plants is outdated and thy actually have the technology for this? Because the sheer number of hits I got tells me it's real technology.

      I have no idea about the pesticides, but people did farming for thousands of years without pesticides ... so I'm not convinced it's not possible to grow plants without pesticides.

      • I have to agree... I mean, besides the LED street lights outside my home, they do make/sell full-spectrum LED lighting that has more than sufficient candlepower to do the job of growing plants, especially when placed pretty close to the plants themselves.

      • I don't think the concern was that we don't have LED technology which can produce good grow lights. The question is whether this can actually be more efficient than letting the sun do the job.
        • Re:Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)

          by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @10:48AM (#50451529) Homepage

          Which nobody is claiming ... what they're saying is, given a finite amount of land, and the fact that nutrients are lost once you harvest and begin shipping ... you can also grow some food close to where the people who will eat it actually live. And you can do it year round.

          Efficiency, in this case, includes year round production, shipping, and the ability to have certain kinds of fresh produce without having to ship it around the world.

          Unless you have a way to ship lettuce from Peru to London which is solar powered, you're kind of missing one of the points. Local production has its own efficiencies and benefits.

          • The summary claims that the underground solution uses less energy than a greenhouse. Maybe the summary is bad (I know that'd be a first on slashdot).
            • OK, pick your damned whining ... either it's not as efficient as the sun, or it's more efficient than the greenhouse.

              I assume at this point you're just moving the goal posts so you have something to complain about?

              It can be a lot less efficient than the sun, and also be a lot more efficient than a green house. And you don't need to ship it half way around the world in the winter.

              Honestly, WTF are you complaining about now? This doesn't sound like a problem with the summary, it sounds like a problem with t

              • OK, pick your damned whining ... either it's not as efficient as the sun, or it's more efficient than the greenhouse.

                Umm, where do you think greenhouses get their light?

                And you don't need to ship it half way around the world in the winter.

                You can put greenhouses in the city, too.

                • Umm, where do you think greenhouses get their light?

                  Ah, you're one of those people ... believe it or not, a good portion of the planet lives in latitudes where the sunlight in winter is inadequate for growing crops even in a greenhouse ... and by changing the light cycles, you can change how long it takes to be able to harvest to a much shorter cycle.

                  In a lot of cases greenhouses still need to have big giant sodium lights because the few hours of daylight isn't enough to grow plants.

                  But, hey, I'm sure nobod

                  • by Khyber ( 864651 )

                    "believe it or not, a good portion of the planet lives in latitudes where the sunlight in winter is inadequate for growing crops even in a greenhouse"

                    http://www.greenrhinoenergy.co... [greenrhinoenergy.com]

                    Cover that greenhouse with solar panels and use LED, and you're practically home-free. Even in Antarctica, which while not pictured, actually gets LONG periods of constant sunlight and thus has a higher yearly irradiance in many locations, versus say Australia.

                    • And yet in Northern latitudes you can get only a few scant hours of daylight in the winter.

                      So, if you got sun, use it .. if you don't got sun, LEDs are what you need.

                      Oddly enough, there is no single solution which works everywhere. But apparently when you have an underground bunker in the UK, you can still find something which works

                • Umm, where do you think greenhouses get their light?

                  They sure as hell don't get it all from the sun .. London is further North than Green Bay Wisconsin.

                  Nobody is growing vegetables in greenhouses in Green Bay Wisconsin in the winter without some additional lighting.

                  And London is about 5 degrees further North.

                  • Really? https://www.rhs.org.uk/advice/... [rhs.org.uk]

                    Note the complete lack of any discussion of artificial lighting. Heat is important for winter greenhouses in England, but with regard to light the only discussion is about shading during the summer. Moreover, I have a colleague who lives in a small town just north of Sheffield who gardens year-round in an un-lit greenhouse. He says the shorter days in the winter result in slower growth, and some plants like it more than others so he changes the mix of what he's gro

              • house. And you don't need to ship it half way around the world in the winter.

                Honestly, WTF are you complaining about now? This doesn't sound like a problem with the summary, it sounds like a problem with the poster.

                I think maybe he was molested by a hydroponics technician when he was little.

            • The summary claims that the underground solution uses less energy than a greenhouse. Maybe the summary is bad (I know that'd be a first on slashdot).

              I wouldn't doubt it at all. LEDs do a really good job of turning little sips of electricity into bright light. They certainly use less energy than CFLs, and a metric shitload less than Filament based bulbs. Even more savings are to be had with banks of them powered with DC, since you don't have the energy suckage of an individual power supply to each bulb.

              And you do have a fair amount of electricity at work for that aboveground greenhouse.

    • "no pesticides"....no way. None to start maybe but, plant pests will get in and they will require pesticides to remove. Might get your first crop or two pest free, but without pesticides or a complete sanitary cleanout between crops, its not going to last.

      Won't you be shocked when you look up what "organic farming" means. It has a legal definition and everything.

      • Won't you be shocked when you look up what "organic farming" means. It has a legal definition and everything.

        Yeah, one that includes use of pesticides.

    • Re:Bullshit (Score:5, Informative)

      by selectspec ( 74651 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @10:30AM (#50451423)

      Actually, the no pesticides claim is completely true. First, by having the crops indoors, you seriously cut down on attracting open air pests. Second, the crops are seeded in a cloth mat. After harvest, the mats are removed, cleaned, and if too worn destroyed. The cleaning process happens every 20 days, which is much shorter than the insects life cycle. So, the insects never get a chance to settle in. The cleaning process is like a laundry, removes any eggs.

      • by TheCarp ( 96830 )

        I did specifically qualify it as "without a sanitary cleanout". 20 days is most certainly not shorter than the life cycle than most plant pests, but is enough to keep them from establishing a colony so yah that would work.

        However, i do wonder how much of this significant amount of work is being considered when saying its so much more efficient.

        In many ways a closed environment can be worst than open air because open air crops attract both pest and pest predator, closed environments are far more resistant to

        • I did specifically qualify it as "without a sanitary cleanout". 20 days is most certainly not shorter than the life cycle than most plant pests, but is enough to keep them from establishing a colony so yah that would work.

          However, i do wonder how much of this significant amount of work is being considered when saying its so much more efficient.

          In many ways a closed environment can be worst than open air because open air crops attract both pest and pest predator, closed environments are far more resistant to predator establishment than pest.

          Have you worked at a greenhouse? Seems like you know everything about both modes of operation.

          What you are telling us is that plants just grow themselves in greenhouses, The farmer sleeps in every day, and the plants plant themselves, wed and feed and water themselves, and harvest with no human labor.

          Serously to make a aotomobile analogy, You are like the person who claims that Tesla's are failure, because their batteries have less energy when it's really vcold, conveniently forgetting that people hav

      • by Khyber ( 864651 )

        Spoken like someone that's never had to deal with a spider mite infestation.

    • "no pesticides"....no way. None to start maybe but, plant pests will get in and they will require pesticides to remove.

      Dayum, I've been getting organic, hydroponically grown salad greens for years now. I'm pretty certain they have the insect issue taken care of. Probably the only thin they have to really be concerned about is viruses.

      Might get your first crop or two pest free, but without pesticides or a complete sanitary cleanout between crops, its not going to last.

      In a pretty well sealed facility like this, the insects really don't have much place to live. There's no soil, so they can't live in the soil, and concrete b

      • by TheCarp ( 96830 )

        > In a pretty well sealed facility like this, the insects really don't have much place to live. There's no soil, so they can't live in the soil,

        Not all pests require soil, some are quite happy on leaves/stems, or even in bare roots.

        Just off the top of my head, thrips live in soil before they become adults and move up to the leaves. They have been observed to thrive on hydroponic crops just fine.

        Of course, we already have the answer on this....they do a sanitary cleanout.

        Shit, I know a guy who doesn't do

    • by Khyber ( 864651 )

      Actual sunlight efficiency - ~93 l/w

      Current non-lab LED efficiency - 220+ l/w (Cree MK-R) with 300+ l/w already having been announced months ago.

      Of course, people in the horticulture game are using the 110 l/w - 130 l/w LEDs, instead of the easily-available 180+ l/w LEDs out now.

      LEDs have such efficiency that solar powering the entire thing is the way to go, and has been for a few years.

  • Greenhouses are supposed to trap, and therefore produce energy, not to consume it.

    • by swb ( 14022 )

      I'm not sure when greenhouses were meant to be net producers of energy.

      I think their original purposes might have been:

      1) growing things in climates that were otherwise too cold for them (where your energy "production") probably comes from. aka "the greenhouse effect" which I think in practice almost always has some kind of either supplementary heat (if its too cold outside for the sun to provide enough heat) or supplementary ventilation (to keep it from being too hot).

      2) protect more sensitive plants from

      • The Governor of Florida just called. You are not allowed to mention greenhouse effect. Strike it, please.

    • Greenhouses are supposed to trap, and therefore produce energy, not to consume it.

      Good gawd!

      first thing is trapping energy is not producing energy.

      Second thing is why don't you go into a closed greenhouse on a 100 degree day. You probably won't find one, because they have to be opened up to get rid of the excess heat.

      And during the winter, they need heat just like any other building does where you don't want the temps to dip below freezing.

      They do a fine job in operating at the spring/fall portions of the year. Or when there is some abundant energy source, like the thermal energ

    • At Cornell we've done lots of research in the area of Controlled Environment Agriculture (CEA) which includes hydroponics technology. There's a lot of bad information on the internet (and in this topic's comments). Just a few points:

      Re: LEDs being more efficacious than the sun, it's not so simple because you don't pay for direct solar, where you do pay for electricity used to produce supplemental light (whether in a greenhouse or a bomb shelter).

      Even in a relatively cloudy climate like Ithaca, NY, lettuce

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @09:52AM (#50451087) Journal

    a World War II bomb shelter, situated 33 meters beneath the streets of London, has been turned into a high-tech hydroponic farm.

    "We had very little work to do to get it going, as it has been being used as a high tech hydroponic farm, wink, for decades."

    • "We had very little work to do to get it going, as it has been being used as a high tech hydroponic farm, wink, for decades."

      Actually, that was my first thought when I read the summary. Nobody ever got rich farming lettuce. But herb/weed . . . whatever you want to call it . . . that is a cash crop.

      I'm thinking that they have a couple of secret backrooms in that facility. What an excellent cover story! Urban herb farms get busted, because their electricity usage is way above that of the neighbors. If you already declare that you are farming "lettuce" . . . you claim that is why your electricity bill is so high.

      • Ah, but if you're using fancy LEDs instead of big enormous power hungry lamps ... how many LEDs can you run for the cost of a couple of those huge lights?

        If you don't have several kilowats of lighting to deal with, putting out all that excess heat, just how noticeable is it likely to be?

        A few tens of watts versus a few thousand changes a lot ... that's a light bulb or an air conditioning unit instead of the power meter spinning enough to be noticeable.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    For as much as you all claim that metric is so easy, you sure do screw it up a lot.

    "5000 to 20000 kilograms" is inefficient and stupid. It should be 5 to 20 megagrams.

    But I'm just a US-dwelling everyday user of imperial measurements, so what do I know? Oh, wait, yes, that's right, I know how metric works! And your failure to use it properly belies its lack of usefulness. So quit bitching about imperial measurements.

    • As a US citizen, I also have noticed excessive zeroes when using the metric system. I think it may be that when we were taught math in school, one of the first things we learned, because of our use of the imperial measurement system, was FINDING THE LOWEST COMMON DENOMINATOR. I think Metric-using countries may have missed that lesson.
      • No, we just love zeros. There's been a glut of zeros in Europe since the end of the war (the famous 'zero mountain' you might have heard about) and we've always been taught to love zeros and use them when ever we can.

  • by C0L0PH0N ( 613595 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @10:22AM (#50451355)
    There is a bomb shelter built under I-5 near Greenlake in Seattle, that was built in the early 60's (ok, fallout shelter). It was touted, I believe, during the 1962 world's fair in Seattle. Here's a King5 video about it: http://www.king5.com/story/new... [king5.com]. It is a circular room with bathrooms under the freeway, with a small entrance. Later, it was used to issue driver's licenses. I got one there myself in the early 70's. Now, it is a grown-over place used as a City of Seattle municipal records storage center for a few years, and then abandoned. A massive cement structure like a bomb shelter doesn't go away, nice they can be reused in peacetime. What could be more peaceful than marijuana :).
  • by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Thursday September 03, 2015 @10:29AM (#50451415)

    A hidden bunker 100 feet underground with great plumbing and electricity, and you're growing FUCKING LETTUCE??

  • There's more information on the location of this enterprise here [undergroun...tory.co.uk].

    The intention was to re-use these tunnels after the war as part of an express underground line. Never happened, unfortunately, as the Northern Line could do with more capacity!

  • Anyone able to add input on that? My information was that HPS was MORE energy efficient than LED if you went with the correct bulb and wattage... that is... bigger bulbs with the opposing leads.

    I'm not an expert but that was my understanding. Naturally the HPS lights can't be near the plants. You ahve to back up. But they cover a much wider surface area.

    • It's pretty hard to get good numbers on this from manufacturers, because almost everyone gives specs in human vision units (lumens, lux, foot candles, etc) if they give any information at all. For growing plants, photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) units are required to make sensible comparison. PAR consists of wavelengths between 400 and 700 nm. Conversion between the measurement systems is not trivial and can only be done accurately if you know the power of each wavelength in the spectrum.

      It's al

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