Urban underground farms
- added November 22, 2007
- 6 responses
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- TheRealEdwin
- added this
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- related topics
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- Japan (757)
- Sustainability (304)
- Urban (105)
- Underground (31)
- Farm (24)
- pasona (1)
- resona bank (1)
- daiwa bank (1)
- otemachi (1)
An underground rice and vegetable field has been planted beneath an office building in Tokyo's Otemachi business district. This urban farm - in what used to be the vault of a major bank - is maintained using computer-controlled artificial light and temperature management. It was brought into being by a personnel company as a means of providing agricultural training to young people who are having trouble finding employment and middle-aged people in search of a second career.
New Use for Former Bank Vault. The hi-tech vegetable patch, called Pasona O2, is located in the Otemachi Nomura Building in the Tokyo district of Otemachi, where many major corporations have their headquarters. The building, which has 27 floors above ground and five below, used to be home to Tokyo Life Insurance and Resona Bank (formerly Daiwa Bank). But these firms have left, and office space in the building is now leased to several different companies. This project was launched by the temporary staffing agency Pasona Inc. When Pasona moved its headquarters to this building, it decided to lease the second basement floor - formerly the Resona Bank vault - and turn it into a vegetable garden.
New Use for Former Bank Vault. The hi-tech vegetable patch, called Pasona O2, is located in the Otemachi Nomura Building in the Tokyo district of Otemachi, where many major corporations have their headquarters. The building, which has 27 floors above ground and five below, used to be home to Tokyo Life Insurance and Resona Bank (formerly Daiwa Bank). But these firms have left, and office space in the building is now leased to several different companies. This project was launched by the temporary staffing agency Pasona Inc. When Pasona moved its headquarters to this building, it decided to lease the second basement floor - formerly the Resona Bank vault - and turn it into a vegetable garden.
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- TheRealEdwin
- 10 months ago
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Underground growing certainly isn't a new thing...This American house looks perfectly normal from the outside, anything but a cannabis cultivation that any Amsterdam 'coffee shop' would be proud of!
Click the link and check out the photos and see the lengths the owner went to to evade arrest. Dedication to underground growing if ever I've seen it. -
Not underground,but urban all the same. :)
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- Vierotchka
- 10 months ago
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Glass fibreWhy use only artificial lighting? With fibre optic tubes, natural light and sunlight could be brought from the roof to the underground "fields" - thus much energy could be saved.
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- Vierotchka
- 10 months ago
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Probably due to the cost of fiber optics back when they originally built the farm. While it is getting cheaper, back then it was way too expensive.
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- TheRealEdwin
- 10 months ago
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I love it, reminds me of those hydroponic farms that used fish to recycle and fertilize the water.
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Itailian underground templesTheres a guy in Italy who spent 40 years carving out a magical system of temples and tunnels into the hillside.
He kept it secret for 40 years and then opened the door inside his house to the weird magical world he created...-
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- phillyharper
- 10 months ago
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