London

A "farm in a box" shipping container will help London Food Bank feed more people

Food farming is taking on a different form at the London Food Bank with the introduction of a shipping container that will be used to grow vegetables year-round. 

The Food Bank hopes to have the shipping container ready to use by the end of the year

a man with white hair stands in a green house
Food Bank Director Glen Pearson is pictured here in the London Food Bank's greenhouse. (Submitted by Glen Pearson)

Food farming is taking on a different form at the London Food Bank with the introduction of a shipping container that will be used to grow vegetables year-round. 

The 12 metre container, donated by the London and District Construction Association (LDCA), will be equipped to grow plants in a water-based nutrient solution, rather than soil. 

"It's able to grow what 3 1/2 acres of land would normally grow," said Glen Pearson, co-director at the Food Bank. "They're able to grow way more food than our greenhouse does, for instance, and they grow 24/7 — all the time."

Pearson calls it a "farm in a box", and the hope is to have it up and running by the end of the year. The materials and labour will be covered by the LDCA.

These strawberries will be enjoyed by one of the food bank's clients as soon as they are ripe.
These strawberries were pictured being grown in the main London Food Bank greenhouse. (Angela McInnes/CBC)

"We're big on it. We've studied it for two or three years. We've researched it. We know what we're ready to do," Pearson said.

This first shipping container may not be the last. Pearson said there are plans to look into expanding the number of containers for more hydroponics farming, pending results from the first one.

"We need to look a bit more at trying to figure out a way in which communities can become more food secure. This is the start," said Pearson.