Avocados from Mexico. Apples from Chile. Broccoli from China. If you take a look at the stickers on the produce you’re buying at the grocery store, chances are they’ll read something like this.
Jason Green, the aptly named CEO of Edenworks, says too many articles on the growth of the indoor farming industry are missing its "most exciting aspect." That is, the ability to achieve new levels of ...
Edenworks is an urban agriculture startup based in East Williamsburg in the finals for the NYU Social Venture Competion this Friday. The competition kicked off in September, but the aquaponics venture ...
An icon in the shape of a lightning bolt. Impact Link Could fish poop be the key to growing fresh, nutritious vegetables? That's the idea behind Edenworks, an urban farming startup that will soon grow ...
Outside the Edenworks greenhouse, the company’s guests were sampling quinoa wraps and tilapia tacos prepared by The Market’s chef, Luke Wu, the scene illuminated primarily by the setting sun. Inside, ...
Up in the air, tilapia swim. In Bushwick, you can say such a thing and nobody can call you crazy. Fine fish are frolicking by the tubful on the roof of an industrial building at the corner of Bushwick ...
Urban farming has been gaining popularity these days in NYC, but a Brooklyn-based company is taking the verdant practice to new heights–literally. Hidden away on a Johnson Avenue warehouse rooftop ...
For years, the only produce that thrived indoors — and made money doing so — was cannabis. The leafy, THC-producing plant grew happily in fraternity basements and the back rooms of Colorado shops ...
In their new warehouse, set to open in New York City this summer, fish will grow in tanks, bacteria will turn the fish waste into a rich fertilizer, and plants will use that fertilizer to grow.
Here’s one way to grow food in an urban environment: Raise a school of tilapia in a tank. Filter out the nitrogen-rich waste, and let naturally occurring bacteria transform it from ammonia into ...