What It's Really Like Inside Bowery Farming, A Vertical Farm On The Rise
What It's Really Like Inside Bowery Farming, A Vertical Farm On The Rise
The Tom Colicchio-backed farm is bringing the movement to new heights.
April 17, 2018
Just eight miles from the hustle and bustle of New York City, in a warehouse that looks like any other on West 20th Street in Kearny, New Jersey, is Bowery Farming, where farmers grow leafy greens and herbs indoors, to sell at Whole Foods and NYC restaurants.
“Bowery is a modern farming company on a mission to grow food for a better future,” co-founder and CEO Irving Fain says. It does so, Fain says, by “combining the benefits of the best local farms with advances in technology,” including its proprietary BoweryOS, which Fain has aptly dubbed the “brain of our farms.” BoweryOS uses a “network of sensors and cameras throughout our farms to collect millions of points of data in real-time,” Fain says, and with the system’s 24/7 monitoring, it makes “automatic adjustments to environmental conditions to improve crop quality, health, yield, and flavor” of herbs and greens, Fain says.
To get its kale less chalky, for example, Bowery Farming uses its software system “to tweak certain variables such as nutrients and light intensity,” Fain explains. Chefs and restaurateurs are taking note. Tom Colicchio, for one, was an early investor in the farm and uses its greens at his NYC restaurant Temple Court (previously Fowler & Wells).
Using the software to tweak nutrients and light isn't the only benefit of Bowery's set-up, however.
The contained environment allows for 365 days of growing in perfect conditions. They don't use any pesticides and, according to Fain, "95 percent less water than traditional agriculture, all while remaining 100-plus times more productive on the same footprint of land.” Impressive.
For the farmers, the indoor environment obviously means a different kind of day than you'd find in traditional agriculture. Katie Morich, a farmer at Bowery Farming, begins her day at 7 a.m. with food safety checks, “making sure that the environment is optimized across both temperature and humidity levels, the farmers are healthy, and everything in the farm is spick and span.”
Morich, who is part of a team of 28 people, collects data on the crops the farm is harvesting that day and tracks the progress of other crops in varying stages of growth.
“Some days we have a lot of crop harvesting to do, other days a ton of data collection,” she describes. “We have quality control measures in place to ensure that we are producing the best produce possible. The more data we collect, the more powerful we make BoweryOS.”
By 3 p.m., Morich is done for the day, but must confirm—through the BoweryOS—that she has completed the system’s checklist before she can leave. And “even though I leave at 3 p.m., the thing about our farm is that it runs 24/7, unlike traditional farming,” Morich says.
“It sometimes feels like I’m speaking two different languages at the farm: I’m deeply involved in some hands-on farming methods, while I’m collecting an enormous amount of data to optimize our crops and the efficiency of our farm,” Morich explains. “That said, as indoor agriculture grows as a category, being an urban farmer won’t seem like such an unusual job anymore.”