A greenhouse makes plant waste every week. Composted on site, it becomes living soil — enough to keep the beds going without trucking in inputs, with the surplus going back to the town’s gardens, parks, and schools.
Power and water get the headlines. The quiet one is what the land gives back.
Every harvest leaves trimmings, spent plants, and root mass behind. On most operations that’s a disposal cost. Here it’s the start of next season’s soil.
Composted on site, greenhouse waste returns as a living growing medium — building the beds back up instead of drawing them down. The greenhouse becomes a little more self-sustaining each cycle.
The aim is simple: keep enough compost in the loop to sustain the beds, and send the surplus outward. Volumes are an engineering design target until the first site is metered.†
A loop that closes on itself before it ever reaches over the fence.
Greenhouse waste is composted on site rather than hauled away — closing the loop where it’s made.
Finished compost rebuilds the beds, trimming bought-in inputs and keeping the growing system steady.
Surplus soil goes back to the community — gardens, parks, and schools that grow their own.
This isn’t a claim to fix a region’s soil. It’s a closed loop that keeps one greenhouse healthy and hands its extra to neighbors who can use it.
Surplus volumes depend on crop mix, site size, and season — so we treat them as design targets, not promises, until a working site is measured.
Sustainable growth — for the greenhouse, and then the town.