Under an anonymous back street in south London lies a vast underground air-raid shelter that has been turned into a pioneering urban farm supplying supermarkets and restaurants in the capital.
The World War II shelter in Clapham, which could protect up to 8,000 people from Nazi German bombs, consists of two large tunnels that were intended to one day become an extension of the London Underground.
That never happened and the shelter was abandoned for 70 years until two entrepreneurs, Steven Dring and Richard Ballard, decided to grow broccoli, coriander, fennel and a host of other vegetables as so-called “micro leaves,” also known as micro herbs, grown from seedlings, but harvested early when the first leaves form.
Photo: AFP
“We need to create these new fertile spaces” to meet increased demand from a growing global population, Dring told AFP on a visit to Growing Underground — about 33m below the road.
Staff wear protective clothing and there is a strong smell of vegetables and humidity in the shelter. The vegetables are grown with hydroponics, using nutrient solutions in a water solvent instead of soil.
The technique can also be used to grow a wide range of produce, including tomatoes and baby peppers, Dring said.
The only other ingredient required is light.
The tunnels have no natural light and are illuminated with pink LEDs, giving them a futuristic look.
The intensity of the light changes to imitate daylight, but with one major difference — the lights are dimmed during the day and shine brightest at night, as electricity is cheapest then.
“We predominantly grow micro herbs, which are standard herbs, from different seeds, but what we do is we grow them to a very small stage, before the first true leaves start to come out,” Dring said.
Micro herb broccoli takes between three and five days to grow before being packaged up in the shelter and sent off.
Fans rave about the intensity of the flavors of the produce.
Customers include Marks and Spencer PLC, which offers the produce in some of its supermarkets, several stalls at London’s Borough Market and many restaurants — helped by the patronage of celebrity chef Michel Roux Jr of Le Gavroche.
Dring and Ballard latched onto the concept of vertical farming — producing food in vertically stacked layers — which was developed by US biologist Dickson Despommier in his 2010 book The Vertical Farm: Feeding the World in the 21st Century.
The operation takes up about 200m of the 1km available in the air-raid shelter tunnel, half for growing while the other half is used for packaging.
Their request to use the air-raid shelter in Clapham was eagerly taken up by the owners of the space, London’s public transport company.
This type of farming is “100 times cheaper” than setting up an urban farm on the surface, Dring said.
Their customers have said they are happy with the result.
“I think the story is fantastic,” said Charlie Curtis, an agronomist at Marks and Spencer.
“I think we all love to think that our food is grown locally to us, but I think also the product sells itself. The quality is fantastic and the flavor is like something I’ve never had before,” she said.
Experts have said vertical and urban farming could be ways not only of facing up to population growth, but also growing urbanization worldwide, as well as climate change.
Nottingham University’s Centre for Urban Agriculture said on its Web site that urban farms create jobs, reduce transport costs and pollution, as well as offer an “opportunity to develop technologies.”
The Growing Underground project sends its data on humidity, temperature and plant growth to Cambridge University to try and improve efficiency.
“What these guys are doing is modeling for us which one is the optimum environment for each product,” Dring said.
Every day is the same in the underground farm and there are no seasons, or unpredictable British weather.
“We have a lot more control than usual growers... When in the winter days it’s cold under the glass, it will take you 25 days to grow red mustard,” Dring said. “It will always take us 10 days to grow red mustard.”
“There’s nothing that stands as a major challenge, apart from building a farm underneath London,” he added.
Stephen Garrett, a 27-year-old graduate student, always thought he would study in China, but first the country’s restrictive COVID-19 policies made it nearly impossible and now he has other concerns. The cost is one deterrent, but Garrett is more worried about restrictions on academic freedom and the personal risk of being stranded in China. He is not alone. Only about 700 American students are studying at Chinese universities, down from a peak of nearly 25,000 a decade ago, while there are nearly 300,000 Chinese students at US schools. Some young Americans are discouraged from investing their time in China by what they see
Taiwan Transport and Storage Corp (TTS, 台灣通運倉儲) yesterday unveiled its first electric tractor unit — manufactured by Volvo Trucks — in a ceremony in Taipei, and said the unit would soon be used to transport cement produced by Taiwan Cement Corp (TCC, 台灣水泥). Both TTS and TCC belong to TCC International Holdings Ltd (台泥國際集團). With the electric tractor unit, the Taipei-based cement firm would become the first in Taiwan to use electric vehicles to transport construction materials. TTS chairman Koo Kung-yi (辜公怡), Volvo Trucks vice president of sales and marketing Johan Selven, TCC president Roman Cheng (程耀輝) and Taikoo Motors Group
MAJOR DROP: CEO Tim Cook, who is visiting Hanoi, pledged the firm was committed to Vietnam after its smartphone shipments declined 9.6% annually in the first quarter Apple Inc yesterday said it would increase spending on suppliers in Vietnam, a key production hub, as CEO Tim Cook arrived in the country for a two-day visit. The iPhone maker announced the news in a statement on its Web site, but gave no details of how much it would spend or where the money would go. Cook is expected to meet programmers, content creators and students during his visit, online newspaper VnExpress reported. The visit comes as US President Joe Biden’s administration seeks to ramp up Vietnam’s role in the global tech supply chain to reduce the US’ dependence on China. Images on
New apartments in Taiwan’s major cities are getting smaller, while old apartments are increasingly occupied by older people, many of whom live alone, government data showed. The phenomenon has to do with sharpening unaffordable property prices and an aging population, property brokers said. Apartments with one bedroom that are two years old or older have gained a noticeable presence in the nation’s six special municipalities as well as Hsinchu county and city in the past five years, Evertrust Rehouse Co (永慶房產集團) found, citing data from the government’s real-price transaction platform. In Taipei, apartments with one bedroom accounted for 19 percent of deals last