News About Farming in Shipping Containers & Limited Indoor Spaces

How Elon Musk's Brother Became an Urban "Farmer" and Leads Projects Aimed at Transforming Schools, Cities, and Food Production

Kimbal Musk's journey encompasses school gardens, vertical farms in shipping containers, and educational projects that advocate for local cultivation, healthy consumption, and agriculture as a tool for continuous social transformation.

While Elon Musk dominates global debates about technology and transportation, his younger brother, Kimbal Musk, follows a different path because he sees food as a way to have a direct social impact.

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USA - COLORADO: Escalante Middle School Students Learn Value of Agriculture in Greenhouse Class

Escalante Middle School students are running a warm and flourishing hydroponic indoor oasis for their hand-grown plants and herbs this winter – and their bounty is stocking the school cafeteria and shelves at Durango Natural Foods.

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JAMAICA: Blueprint Farms Grows Demand After Hurricane Melissa

With farms across western Jamaica badly damaged after Hurricane Melissa and warnings of food shortages beginning to surface, Blueprint Farms is already seeing early signs of rising demand for its climate-resilient hydroponic systems.

Founder Jermaine Bryan says the surge in interest comes as households and businesses look for alternative ways to secure fresh produce amid supply disruptions.

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USA: University of Wisconsin, Stevens-Point at Marshfield and Marshfield Clinic Partner to Grow Local Produce Year-Round

A new partnership aims to bring fresh, local produce to those in need in central Wisconsin.

The Wisconsin PureGrow Project: A Sustainable Growth Initiative was launched at the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point at Marshfield, according to a community announcement. The collaboration involves the university, Marshfield Clinic region of Sanford Health and Fork Farms.

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CALGARY, CANADA: ‘Something You Can’t Get Out of a Textbook’: Diamond Valley Students Enjoy Learning at Vertical Farm

Students at Oilfields High School in Diamond Valley, Alta., are getting their hands dirty learning about vertical farming.

“I enjoy the hands-on experience we get—a hands-on environment where we’re learning how to do stuff that we don’t get to learn everywhere else,” said Taeyo Shipman, a student working on the vertical farm.

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USA - WISCONSIN: From Campus to Table: Students Bring Hydroponic Harvest to the Community for Thanksgiving

By introducing students to hydroponics and aquaponics, the lab has the ability to teach that food production doesn’t have to rely on large carbon footprints associated with fuel and long-distance transportation.

Kassandra Clint, student lab manager, monitors the hydroponics system daily to ensure proper pH and nutrient levels.

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SINGAPORE: New Partnership to Bring Aeroponic Farms to Eton Academy

Agrihome SG has partnered with The Eton Academy at Mountbatten to bring several aeroponic farms to their new center.

This partnership highlights how seamlessly sustainability and hands-on learning can blend. Students now get to enjoy fresh greens straight from the farm, with zero food waste and a fun way to learn about where their food comes from.

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USA - LOUISIANA: LSU Research Bites: Smarter Hydroponic, Soil-Free Farm Methods Reduce Crop Contamination Risk

Hydroponics is a method for growing food in a water-based solution rich in nutrients, rather than using soil. This allows growers to plant more crops in a smaller area, saving land and water, and enabling plants to grow up to 50% faster than in traditional farming methods.

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USA - NEW YORK: High School Teacher Using Hydroponics Lab to Grow Future AgTech Leaders

Chris Regini is a New York State Master Teacher that holds a degree in physics from the University of Connecticut. He has spent 20 years in the Half Hollow Hills school district, where he uses hydroponic farming to teach students about horticulture, AgTech, and engineering.

We recently spoke with Chris to learn about his journey with CEA and his experiences bringing AgTech into the classroom.

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USA - NEW YORK: Indoor Gardens Provide Fresh Greens For Campus Community

College-in-the-Woods (CIW) Dining Hall is not only surrounded by greenery on the outside, but also grows fresh leafy greens inside the building. Throughout the dining area, glowing white columns sprout herbs, lettuce and more, giving diners a first-hand look at sustainability in action at Binghamton University.

Three Tower Gardens were planted at CIW in fall 2024 after the Binghamton University Dining Services (BUDS) team learned about the hydroponic towers and collaborated with the University to bring them on-site.

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VIDEO - TEXAS: Students Use High-Tech Farm to Feed Classmates in Manor ISD

Inside Oak Meadows Elementary, school leaders have launched a program to hydroponically grow fresh lettuce and basil as part of the school district’s Farm to School initiative.

To grow vegetables hydroponically, plants grow in nutrient-rich water instead of soil.

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USA - Pennsylvania: Local Teacher Brings ‘Flexible Farming’ to Life in Brookville Elementary Science Class

At Brookville Elementary, the freshest lettuce isn’t grown in a garden bed—it’s grown indoors, without even touching soil.

This innovative approach is thanks to a grant written by Kain Kennemuth, a second-year science teacher, who brought a fully functioning hydroponics system, called the Flex Farm, to the classroom.

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VIDEO: Milan Tennessee Elementary School Grows Their Own Lettuce With New Hydroponic System

The nutrition staff oversees the hydroponic program and works hand-in-hand with students, who are learning valuable skills in planting, monitoring nutrient and PH levels, and harvesting the lettuce used in their own school meals.

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Virginia Western Hydroponics Program Grows High Schoolers’ Skills

What is green and crunchy — and might help high schoolers unlock a future career?

The answer is all about educational partnerships. Virginia Western Community College has developed a 5-week hydroponics project for high school classrooms, using a hydroponics tower to grow Buttercrunch lettuce. A sensor creates graphical visualizations of data, and students interpret the data that has been collected over the project’s duration.

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VIDEO: Here's Why Some Think 'Vertical Farming' Could Solve Some of Arkansas's Biggest Problems

SHERIDAN, Ark. — Two of Arkansas’s biggest problems, struggling farmers and food insecurity, could be addressed by a farming technique that was shown off in Sheridan on Tuesday.

This year, we have spoken with several farmers who said they could be forced to close their family farms, and Arkansas often ranks near the top of the list for food insecurity in America.

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USA - WISCONSIN: Germantown High School Students Offer Homegrown Vegetables to School's Cafeteria Menu

Amanda Estes, 17, harvests green star lettuce on Friday, Oct. 17, 2025, grown at Germantown High School's Flex Farm, an indoor mobile hydroponic farm from Fork Farms in Germantown, Wisconsin. Estes, a vegetarian, said she has learned a lot about plants' life cycles while participating in this class.

"We can feed the entire cafeteria with the lettuce we produce here. I feel like I'm making a difference in our community.

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Growing Connections During National Farm to School Month

October is National Farm to School Month, a nationwide celebration of how schools, communities, and foodservice leaders are rethinking what “local food” means. It’s about strengthening food systems, empowering students, and creating a healthier, more sustainable future, one seed, one tray, and one lesson at a time.

At Babylon Micro-Farms, we’re proud to help bring this mission to life. Our indoor micro-farms make it possible for schools to grow fresh, nutritious produce on-site, all year long, with no pesticides, no long-distance shipping, and no growing seasons required.

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INDIANA: Jefferson STEM Elementary Showcases Tower Garden Learning Experience

WARSAW —  Jefferson STEM Elementary recently welcomed Steven Koontz, Indiana Master Gardener and owner of Keep It Watered, for a hands-on learning experience with Jefferson’s six aeroponic tower gardens.

The gardens, made possible through generous donations from Da-Lite/Legrand and the K21 Health Foundation, have become an ongoing part of Jefferson’s STEM program thanks to Koontz’s continued support with materials and expertise.

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