Shipping Container Farms Expanding To Grocery Stores Around The Country

Container farming startup Square Roots partnered with a major distributor to bring locally grown food to cities nationwide

By Liz Stinson  Mar 8, 2019

Photo: Square Roots

Photo: Square Roots

A few years back, Square Roots set up shop in a parking lot in Brooklyn’s Bed Stuy neighborhood. The urban farming startup, founded by Kimbal Musk and Tobias Peggs, built a compact hydroponic farming system inside tricked out shipping containers designed by ORE Design’s Thomas Kosbau.

Now, Square Roots is expanding operations (and keeping the shipping containers). The startup just announced that it’s partnering with Gordon Food Services, a distribution company that works with retailers across the country. The plan is to build Square Roots facilities (i.e. shipping containers) on or near GFS’s distribution or retail locations in order to shorten the amount of time it takes to go from hydroponic pod to store shelves.

Photo: Square Roots

Photo: Square Roots

Fast Company reports that each new Square Roots location will get somewhere around 10 shipping containers, though that number could grow in the future.

“We’ll start with putting 10 containers down in a market, and as demand for locally grown produce increases, we can very quickly expand our footprint by adding more modules,” Peggs told Fast Company.

With each container generating around 50,000 pounds of produce each year, that’s a major upgrade for locally grown food.

ViaFast Company

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