News About Farming in Shipping Containers & Limited Indoor Spaces
USA - MAINE: Katahdin Students Grow Fresh Greens For WHS Cafeteria With Indoor Garden
Fresh, locally grown food has long been a priority for the RSU 14 nutrition program. But Maine’s long, harsh winters typically bring the growing season for leafy vegetables to a halt. Now, thanks to the rising popularity of hydroponic gardening, RSU 14 can keep fresh produce growing year-round with a portable, vertical indoor garden system.
USA - FLORIDA: FarmBox Foods Empowers Students With Hydroponic Fodder Technology
The Villages Charter School has integrated a controlled-climate Hydroponic Fodder Farm into its curriculum to modernize agricultural education.
This modular system, designed and manufactured by FarmBox Foods, provides students with direct exposure to high-tech feed production methods.
The 2026 U.S. Farm Bill Includes Dedicated Funding for Tribal Food Sovereignty
The draft legislation sets aside 10% of a new local food purchasing program specifically for Tribes to purchase local food and directs agricultural conservation programs to recognize traditional ecological knowledge. The only hurdle is that the passing of the bill might be delayed for more than a year due to political theatre so we wouldn't hold our breath.
Nova Scotia Groups Come Together To Teach Hydroponic Farming
Inside a converted shipping container in Westphal, N.S., the Akoma Hydroponic Garden is growing fresh basil and teaching young people about horticulture.
For African Heritage Month, Akoma Holdings and EduHaus partnered together to teach and employ Black Nova Scotians in hydroponic farming.
What Is a Hydroponic Classroom Container Farm? A Practical Guide for Educators
A hydroponic classroom container farm is a 40-foot shipping container retrofitted with lighting, irrigation systems, nutrient dosing equipment, and environmental sensors to create a fully controlled indoor growing space.
Unlike traditional school gardens, these systems operate year-round and allow students to manage every variable affecting plant growth.
CANADA: Can Souped-Up Shipping Containers Solve Food Insecurity?
More than a decade ago, two students at the University of Ottawa, Alida Burke and Corey Ellis, were on a school trip to Nunavut when they got a firsthand look at food insecurity.
Two students looked around for a solution, but seeing none, decided to create one themselves. In 2016, they developed a modular, indoor farm in a shipping container. they called their new venture Growcer.
USA: Extension Offers Hands-On Training in Soil-free vegetable farming in Southern Nevada
As southern Nevada works to strengthen food security amid an arid climate and limited arable land, University of Nevada, Reno Extension is offering an educational certificate series on indoor vertical farming, or hydroponics, to equip commercial growers, home gardeners, Master Gardener volunteers and educators with research-based expertise in soil-free vegetable farming.
USA - COLORADO: CU Alum Takes An Affordable Approach to Indoor Farming
Rooted Robotics offers products that help farmers with seeding, harvesting and cleaning. Each system is designed with simplicity, reliability and sustainability in mind.
Everything the company sells is also made to be upgradable with customized add-ons, allowing the machines to grow with the farms they support.
USA - MILWAUKEE: “Our Goal Is To Provide a Supportive Platform For Innovators"
In parallel with its product expansion, FullCircle26 is collaborating with The MARM Farm, a Milwaukee-based nonprofit organization focused on education, conservation, and food accessibility.
The collaboration centers on the development of a 40-foot container-based growing unit that combines hydroponic production with mushroom cultivation.
USA - MISSOURI: A Student Farming Program is Expanding in Urban Schools. Here's What City Kids Get Out of FFA
University City High School is in the center of the sprawl in and around St. Louis — about as insulated as it could be from the wide swaths of farmland outside the city.
Tucked in the back of the school, between the gymnasium and the swimming facility, is a shipping container that contains the school’s new hydroponic farm.
CANADA: Alberta First Nations School Wins Prize From U.A.E. for a Hydroponics Garden
Ray Fankhauser, sustainability lead at the school, was one of the people behind entering the school for the award.
Fankhauser said that with the level of interest from the students to work the garden, they needed something bigger, so they looked at developing a modular hydroponic farm using Canadian technology called Growcer.
USA - OHIO: Seed to Salad: Mayfield Students Harvest 82 Heads of Lettuce for School Lunches
Some Mayfield City Schools students are experiencing the satisfaction of having the fruits (or in this case the lettuce) of their classroom efforts result in a real-life application -- helping to feed their fellow students.
USA - Hawaii: Public Schools Advance Farm-to-School Effort With New Small Farm Partnerships
Hawaiʻi Department of Education is rolling out a new process that encourages small farm micropurchases of locally grown produce for school meals throughout the state in an effort to advance farm-to-school initiatives.
CANADA: Fresh Solutions to Community Hunger: A $15M Campaign to Change What's Possible
For a decade, Growcer has been working alongside communities across Canada to prove that local, year-round food production is not only possible, it is transformative.
Robbinsville Township, New Zealand: Hydroponic Farm Tour: A Small Space Making a Big Impact
Just a few miles from our Hamilton office sits an unexpected hub of innovation: a fully operational hydroponic farm tucked inside a refurbished shipping container at the Robbinsville Municipal Complex.
ALASKA: Greenwave Opens Kelp Nursery in Kodiak To Reduce Cost For Farmers and Increase Production
GreenWave, a national nonprofit, opened this first-of-its-kind nursery in Kodiak in August, with Conrad as its nursery manager and lead operator.
It’s Alaska’s newest hatchery. She said her focus is to produce quality kelp by preventing bacteria from growing with the seeds.
BRITISH COLUMBIA: Huu-ay-aht Looks to Grow Fresh Produce in Anacla Through Vertical System
Living in a small, remote community can make it hard to get fresh fruit and vegetables in a pinch. Add to that road closures due to wildfires or storms, making access to grocery stores tough for residents of Anacla and Bamfield.
It also makes bringing in fresh produce equally difficult for the local grocer.
Suffolk Virginia Church Uses Soil-Free Garden To Feed The Community
A Suffolk church is tackling food insecurity with an indoor aeroponic farm that grows fresh vegetables without soil and gives them away for free. Greater Works Community Outreach Ministries operates the "Garden of Eat'n," a vertical indoor farm that uses a growing method called aeroponics.

