How Urban Farms Support the Healthy Living Movement – Tower Garden, a Molecule Store partner

Adriana Siso
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"I love fresh ideas about everything". Adriana Siso founded her contemporary industrial design store in 2002 in Santa Fe, NM. With a background in Fine Arts, Adriana has been an innovator, bringing to the Santa Fe area, original and unique industrial design products by some of the most creative design firms in the world.

The first design partners Molecule worked with were Vitra Design Museum, Moooi, Cherner Chair, and other well-known national and international brands. Today it partners with other world-class manufacturers like Vondom, Loll Designs and Moroso.

Molecule operated out of a recycled and renovated shipping container building, the first of its kind in Santa Fe. Currently Molecule is available through the online store and by appointment.

Sustainability is an important area of interest and ongoing exploration for Molecule, which offers product lines with a focus on conservation and ecological stewardship. A recent alliance with the Vertical Aeroponic Growing System – Tower Garden, promises to offer a lot of inspiration in the growing field of aeroponics as the future of agriculture, industrial design at its best.

A full 90 percent of the U.S. labor force worked on a farm in 1790.1

By 1860, that figure shrank to 58 percent. In 1940, it dropped to 18 percent. And in 1990, less than three percent of workers helped produce our nation’s food.

As our number of farmers decreased, we witnessed an increase in the consumption of processed, packaged, and preserved foods — ultimately contributing to an epidemic of poor health.

And I don’t think the concurrence of these trends is a coincidence. I believe that our society’s disconnection from our food supply has directly harmed our collective health.

But there’s good news: With the healthy living movement that’s taken root across the country, things appear to be turning around.

Tim Blank on a rooftop restaurant farm.

Why Urban Farms are Flourishing

Today, if you flip through a magazine, switch on your television, or turn up the radio, you’ll find stories about healthy living.

These stories often focus on eating an abundance of fresh fruits and vegetables, as studies have shown that doing so can improve and preserve your health.

Not surprisingly, people now seek to add more whole foods to their diets. And as a result, farmers markets have grown exponentially in recent years. Restaurants promoting local, fresh food have seen dramatic lifts in patronage.

In short, the desire for clean, healthy, whole food ingredients supplied by local farmers is stronger than ever.

And with this increase in demand, we’ve seen the rebirth of the urban farmer.

rooftop urban farm

Excited? Start growing your own food today, you can begin with one tower. Don’t wait until you have an idea for a tower farm. Begin one step at a time. You’ll see it is so rewarding, that in no time you’ll want to grow more to share with your family or community.

Producing Food in Unconventional Places

In 2006, I helped design and build the world’s first certified green building with a vertical rooftop farm. And visitors from all over the world came to Orlando, Florida, to see what was possible.

(The weekend we opened, we offered farm tours for $17 and attracted more than 600 people!)

At first glance, cities don’t seem to offer much space for growing food. But every building taking up space on the ground has an empty roof that’s full of potential.

Until every rooftop is producing healthy food, I won’t stop sharing the story of what is possible.

After the rooftop farm in Orlando, we developed more Urban Tower Farms. And mainstream media began to notice.

One evening, Nightline ran a segment on a roof-to-table Tower Farm in Manhattan, causing a flood of website traffic.

In turn, we received inquiries from all kinds of businesses — including hospitals, nursing homes, grocery stores, colleges, restaurants, produce centers, and more.

Almost overnight, an extraordinary number of people became extremely interested in urban farming.

Advocates for healthy living saw urban farming as an opportunity to build a career around something they love and care about. College students from all over the country submitted applications, hoping to land a job where the future of food was now a reality.

farms over buildings

The Key to Growing in a City

Now that we understand how important fruits and vegetables are to a healthy lifestyle, demand for real, fresh (i.e., local) produce is high. And as I just mentioned, many people are rushing to meet that demand.

But traditional farming requires lots of land and capital. Performance is dependent upon weather (so risk is high). And the work is downright dirty — and oftentimes not very enjoyable.

Fortunately, by using less land and water (and no dirt!) to produce more food, Tower Garden gives farmers a fun, easier way to grow almost anywhere in the world.

By Tim Blank, Tower Garden developer.

Interested in joining the urban farming revolution?

Using Tower Garden, forward-thinking farmers make a living while making a difference — without soil, without high overhead, and often without an ounce of previous agricultural experience. With the Tower Garden system, anyone can start a food production tower at home, or an urban farm.

Want to help change the future of food? Send us a note if you have any questions on Tower Garden and we’ll get you some information.

Start with a Community Garden. Great for restaurants, rooftop farms, and schools. A Community Garden can help cultivate a vibrant community. As a set of 12 Tower Gardens, it includes everything you need to start growing up to 336 plants — an abundance of fresh vegetables, herbs, fruits, and flowers. The Community Garden is the first step to an urban farm.

grow beautiful basil on your Tower Garden.