Infarm’s Hamilton Growing Facility is Expanding to Become its Largest Vertical Farm in North America

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By Jeremey Kemeny

July 27, 2021

Greens grown at an indoor farm right here in Hamilton are about to become more accessible at area grocery stores, following an expansion of Infarm’s vertical growing centre.

The company’s facility near the airport is set to dramatically grow over the next several quarters, a spokesperson for the company said.

It’s part of a national expansion, following a deal strengthening Infarm’s relationship with grocery store chain Sobeys Inc. That deal expands the company’s reach to grocery stores in all ten Canadian provinces.

Infarm moved into its facility on Aeropark Boulevard, off Upper James Street, in the last quarter of 2020, said Infarm global communications director Emmanuel Evita.

The Hamilton facility is expected to be Infarm’s largest growing centre in North America, following the expansion, with a growing capacity of 37,000 square feet.

Founded in Berlin, Germany, in 2013, Infarm touts its advancement of modular farms, allowing for growing leaf vegetables in any available space.

In a video, co-founder Osnat Michaeli lauds the efficiency of the vertical growing technology and food waste reduction by farming in proximity to where the food is consumed.

Infarm Co-founder and Chief Brand Officer Osnat Michaeli explains how we're building a global network of vertical farms to grow and distribute fresh produce in cities. Infarm’s modular, cloud-connected system enable us to scale and deploy urban farms fast, growing tasty and nutritious produce more sustainably than traditional agriculture. Our modular technology is at the core of a sustainable global urban farming network that is up to 400 times more efficient than soil-based farming, using 95% less land, 95% less water, and requires 90% fewer food miles to get to consumers.

Infarm’s hyperlocal approach includes growing facilities in stores, restaurants or distribution centres.

Here in Hamilton, they plan to transform their warehouse farm into a high-yield facility.

Each 10-metre-high module at the Hamilton facility will “take just six weeks to build and (yield) a crop-equivalent of up to 10,000 square metres of farmland,” Evita said.

He said they’re expecting the production capacity and the number of locations served by the Hamilton facility to greatly expand, following the outfitting of the facility.

Evita says Infarm expects to expand its Canadian workforce by 50 per cent before the end of the year. It’s not yet known how many of those employees will be in Hamilton.

“Infarm is already offering fresh, local produce grown directly in Sobeys retailers or supplied from our Hamilton location,” Evita says, “with much more to come.”

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