CLT, aquaponics and 3D printing. I'm a structural engineer in Oakland, California and have been using all these tools to build the structures and habitats we want to live in. We have yet to get everything all on one project, but we're working towards that. Viva Catalonia!
Your best video in a while. His combination of expertise, articulation, and enthusiasm made for an enjoyable 20 minutes. And you did exactly the right thing by just letting him roll....
What was amazing to me was the amount of knowledge that they have to do all of this. Because it's not just about the production of the food, with its irrigation system and solar power, etc., but also the engineering that went into designing and building the greenhouses themselves. Really impressive.
Now this Video I was VERY interested in. I am a 62 year old widow and I am learning first hand about Solar Energy. I am also interested in hydroponics...not knowing anything about anything, I am gradually, with videos like this, learning about the things I am interested in. I am also wanting to build my dream House in the near future and it is supposed to be TOTALLY self-contained and Energy efficient. I want to learn about passive and Thermal Energy. So my start is my solar panels that I just installed on my roof and hooked to my deep cycle batteries. I been watching arkopedia Videos and had the idea of living in my Green House, using the heat from the Greenhouse to heat your House inside the Greenhouse. Using your water system from collecting rainwater to filtering for cooking, showering and continuing to use the same water for everything else... Recycling the gray water for your gardens...yes, I have big dreams and I thank utube Videos to slowly bring my ideas into reality...one step at a time...thank you so much
if you like hydroponics, i'm sure you'll love aquaponics ! Managing the right amount of fishes in the water to fertilize it, then sometimes you can eat them with the vegetable you grew with ; )
Thank you Kirsten for this amazing opportunity to give an insight about the Solar Greenhouse to you and your community! I also wanted to mention and thank all the students for their incredible work and dedication to make this possible.
Was für ein schönes Projekt. Die jungen Leute haben den ganzen Prozess von der Nutzungsidee, der Herstellung des Materials bis zum Aufbau alles selbst gemacht. So wertvoll für ein vollumfängliches Verständnis des ökologischen Bauens und deren Zukunft.
I was headhunted for a job in Barcelona working on the design of the 1992 Olympics buildings. If it weren't for the fact my passport was out of date, I would have put down roots there in Catalonia! This greenhouse is stunningly beautiful! I dabbled in organic aquaculture in a 300 sq.m. polytunnel for a while using fish but went vegan soon after and gave it up.
I really appreciate the self sustaining features. I thank you Kirsten for these types of places, it is awesome to see the creativity and fabrication of self sustaining practices.
Love the creative work that these people are doing - requiring lots of practical, hands-on skills that are directly related to an authentic human life. The greenhouse project is a nice blend of high tech carpentry, hydroponics, rainwater harvesting, and thoughtful CAD design. Using lumber created from their own forestry management is the ultimate in sustainable development. Way to go! My wife & I are working on our own 21st century sustainable homestead project and we got some solid ideas & inspiration from this video. Thanks Kirsten!
Now that is one expensive salad if just a greenhouse but with people actually living below in a passive solar home for heating and cooling with solar panels to provide electricity a community of homes could easily supply their own needs with proper waste and grey water systems. Nice prototype for what will one come from this research. Good job.
Great vid. I love the design, especially the way the glass siding is attached like a shingle and allows for ventilation....This also reduces the lateral wind loads. Well done!!
I really like the design of this tiny little green house! It's interesting to see how all of the wood framing for the structure was harvested and cultivated on-site. It seems like a project small enough for one or two people with the right expertise to build, but it appears from the footage shown here that they had plenty of outside help, which is always great! In any case, bravo!
Great video, these student's n their projects give us old school heads hope that there is people outthere doing something to create a better future for humanity!☺️, I wish them all the luck in the world n give my full respect to them!🤔😜💜✌️
Great video! Just let them know they have a mass buildup of algae in their tanks because they need to paint them black to stop the growth. The algae can clog up their pipes as well. Just a helpful tip😊
It was not algae. What you saw was duckweed, a very small floating vascular plant, which only grows on the surface, does not clog the plumbing, kills mosquito larvae, inhibits algae, grows so quickly that it doubles every three days, is 50% protein (nitrogen) and can be skimmed with a net and used as fertilizer. I suspect they are probably mixing it with the sawdust to create compost. There are farmers in Vietnam who mix it with rice hulls and raise chickens on it. Poor people eat duckweed in Cambodia and Africa. The Aztecs used to do stuff with it. You can buy it at Walmart to put in an aquarium.
@Colin Kelley no sir, I know what I saw inside of the containers. I also know the difference between duckweed and algae. Thank you though, but it is algae
@@Hunting2Restore Sorry, I went back and looked at it again. At 10.08 minutes into it, where a stream of water is going into that pond you can very clearly see the individual duck weed plants and there is no algae. It is really really clear this is duck weed. Nothing personal. It is what it is.
I built a 12 x 12 foot pit greenhouse in rural Missouri in the USA with concrete walls. It was five feet deep in the earth. The floor was 56 degrees year round. It was incredibly energy efficient. The glazing was angled to optimise light gathering at the coldest time of the year for the latitude.
Vaig estar a Valldaura Labs fa cosa d'un mes a traves de la universitat; molt inspirador el lloc i la mentalitat de buscar noves formes d'habitar en major corcondància amb la natura aprofitant la ciència i l'arquitectura, increïble!!
Quite an impressive project they have going on. I've never seen plants growing in pure sawdust , I think the wood will steal most of the nitrogen the plants need for their development.
It's something that's got feasibility in cities but to do this if you've got even just 1/4 acre or a back yard it would more than likely be a passion project but it's still an awesome greenhouse
Cool. Hydroponics. It works in a limited way or in mass. Just a quick observation for the people in the greenhouse; you should put in a small dumb waiter/elevator to eliminate the need to walk up and down the embankment. You could power the elevator with a pulley system so you wouldn't need to use electricity.
This is how we need to be growing our food so that we can leave more land for nature. Not sure why they built it behind a tree tho. It's really good for people living in cities to be growing some of their food, not least because it helps them understand the energy and effort needed to provide our food, and it keeps the limitations of nature in mind.
Me eyes were immediately drawn to the window design, so glad you deep dived the topic. I was surprised to see a permanent gap between the windows. I would think they would use a microcontroller, sensors, and servos to open and completely close off windows to regulate the temperature and humidity of the space, especially in winter. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
How do they prevent temperature swings - since they have so little thermal mass to moderate the temp swings? And each window is open in the bottom so warm air and cold air will vent out or be lost to conduction on the single layer glazing?
I noticed heavy soiling on the solar panels (on top of Voxel Quarantine building). May I suggest you to tilt the solar panels (approx 10 degree) to allow rainwater to flow, instead of accumulating on the solar panel surface.
Cool looking greenhouse. But I would be scared as hell walking around that structure. The clamps holding those windows don't look very strong and after a couple of seasons with rain, then they'll fail catastrophically
I don't understand why they left big gaps where the wall windows overlap. Normally a greenhouse is designed so that it can be sealed airtight on cold nights but there appears to be no way to close these gaps as needed.
Nice project. Just I always wonder why people using white/half transparent water tanks. As you can already see, the algy is already thriving inside. The tanks are super difficult to clean and the tanks will much sooner become a sturdy piece of trash then a black water tank for a few euro more.
Wonderful project, but not an environmentally friendly way of producing food. When I look at all the costs of the plant to produce a few leaves of lettuce. Unfortunately, it has nothing to do with a possible cost-effective way of producing food to feed us. Thanks for the video.
I wonder if the water holding tanks could be converted into an aquarium and placed within a solar structure. This would enable some fish farming and proving the plants with nutrients from the fish waste.
Please ask them specifically who makes those solar panels. I LOVE the idea of staggered panels to let light through in a greenhouse roof. And those with the checkered box pattern appear to be ideal. I would love to know who makes them so that I can get specs and potentially buy them.
Hello, what about _transparency_ ? Where come's from the money ? How are taken decisions ? What is the cost of the structure ? Productivity per € spent ?
The view of the crop is shown, it's hard to get a consistent yield when experiments are in place but they possibly have a rough draft of those numbers 😅🤓
CLT, aquaponics and 3D printing. I'm a structural engineer in Oakland, California and have been using all these tools to build the structures and habitats we want to live in. We have yet to get everything all on one project, but we're working towards that. Viva Catalonia!
Your best video in a while. His combination of expertise, articulation, and enthusiasm made for an enjoyable 20 minutes. And you did exactly the right thing by just letting him roll....
As a budding sustainable agro-nut and young homeowner, your videos give me an overwhelming amount of great ideas!
What was amazing to me was the amount of knowledge that they have to do all of this. Because it's not just about the production of the food, with its irrigation system and solar power, etc., but also the engineering that went into designing and building the greenhouses themselves. Really impressive.
Even forestry knowledge to know which trees to cut down and then milling the lumber themselves. Amazing
Much respect to people who think of such systems and then make them happen. Hands-on education for students and teachers alike, too!
Now this Video I was VERY interested in. I am a 62 year old widow and I am learning first hand about Solar Energy.
I am also interested in hydroponics...not knowing anything about anything, I am gradually, with videos like this, learning about the things I am interested in.
I am also wanting to build my dream House in the near future and it is supposed to be TOTALLY self-contained and Energy efficient.
I want to learn about passive and Thermal Energy.
So my start is my solar panels that I just installed on my roof and hooked to my deep cycle batteries.
I been watching arkopedia Videos and had the idea of living in my Green House, using the heat from the Greenhouse to heat your House inside the Greenhouse.
Using your water system from collecting rainwater to filtering for cooking, showering and continuing to use the same water for everything else... Recycling the gray water for your gardens...yes, I have big dreams and I thank utube Videos to slowly bring my ideas into reality...one step at a time...thank you so much
You're on your way-- good luck!
if you like hydroponics, i'm sure you'll love aquaponics ! Managing the right amount of fishes in the water to fertilize it, then sometimes you can eat them with the vegetable you grew with ; )
Thank you Kirsten for this amazing opportunity to give an insight about the Solar Greenhouse to you and your community! I also wanted to mention and thank all the students for their incredible work and dedication to make this possible.
What is the name of the company that makes the solar cells encapsulated in glass?
@@majamoore6209 it’s Onyx Solar
Was für ein schönes Projekt. Die jungen Leute haben den ganzen Prozess von der Nutzungsidee, der Herstellung des Materials bis zum Aufbau alles selbst gemacht. So wertvoll für ein vollumfängliches Verständnis des ökologischen Bauens und deren Zukunft.
Gooood evening from central Florida! Hope everyone has a great night!
Brilliantly done. This should become mandatory for all buildings
Enhorabona Valldaura labs! Thanks Kirsten, cant wait to see more projects here in Catalonia ❤
I like it you keep visiting this project. Its development is so interesting to follow.
I was headhunted for a job in Barcelona working on the design of the 1992 Olympics buildings. If it weren't for the fact my passport was out of date, I would have put down roots there in Catalonia!
This greenhouse is stunningly beautiful! I dabbled in organic aquaculture in a 300 sq.m. polytunnel for a while using fish but went vegan soon after and gave it up.
Thoroughly impressed by everything I see, even what is NOT in the presentation. Love the terracing slopes, like the ancient sites in South America!
Wish I could join the endeavor with my knowledge of tilapia aquaculture.
I really appreciate the self sustaining features. I thank you Kirsten for these types of places, it is awesome to see the creativity and fabrication of self sustaining practices.
Love the creative work that these people are doing - requiring lots of practical, hands-on skills that are directly related to an authentic human life. The greenhouse project is a nice blend of high tech carpentry, hydroponics, rainwater harvesting, and thoughtful CAD design.
Using lumber created from their own forestry management is the ultimate in sustainable development. Way to go!
My wife & I are working on our own 21st century sustainable homestead project and we got some solid ideas & inspiration from this video. Thanks Kirsten!
Nice you revisited this place, wish you could do more updates , like this.
Basically an application of agrivoltaics, good to see more people experimenting with it!
Awesome! 😍 this video could easily have been an hour and it would fly by! More please! 🙏
Absolutely Wonderful. From a man who tries to grow his own veg, this video is inspiring. And has given me even more ideas! Thank you. Shaun.
Excellent to see the multistory greenhouse designs.
Now that is one expensive salad if just a greenhouse but with people actually living below in a passive solar home for heating and cooling with solar panels to provide electricity a community of homes could easily supply their own needs with proper waste and grey water systems. Nice prototype for what will one come from this research. Good job.
Great vid. I love the design, especially the way the glass siding is attached like a shingle and allows for ventilation....This also reduces the lateral wind loads. Well done!!
I really like the design of this tiny little green house! It's interesting to see how all of the wood framing for the structure was harvested and cultivated on-site. It seems like a project small enough for one or two people with the right expertise to build, but it appears from the footage shown here that they had plenty of outside help, which is always great! In any case, bravo!
Thank you Kirsten! Take care.
That’s a huge investment to be able to have fresh salads.
thank you for the best most relevant conversations here 🤗
This was a fascinating Video and delightful to watch!
Great idea, great architecture, great people. Good luck in future projects.
MUY BELLO, GRACIAS POR COMPARTIR 🇲🇽🤗🕊️
Well done. Good job. Good idea. Thanks for the video
This is amazing! Truly amazing!
Great video, these student's n their projects give us old school heads hope that there is people outthere doing something to create a better future for humanity!☺️, I wish them all the luck in the world n give my full respect to them!🤔😜💜✌️
Really great as always thanks!
Awesome project and so much passion of these students. 🥰
Wow! Very nice project!
Great video! Just let them know they have a mass buildup of algae in their tanks because they need to paint them black to stop the growth. The algae can clog up their pipes as well. Just a helpful tip😊
Maybe they're growing algae in that tank as a biofuel and animal feed (jk but it's a thing in a couple places, Hawaii and Israel)
It was not algae. What you saw was duckweed, a very small floating vascular plant, which only grows on the surface, does not clog the plumbing, kills mosquito larvae, inhibits algae, grows so quickly that it doubles every three days, is 50% protein (nitrogen) and can be skimmed with a net and used as fertilizer. I suspect they are probably mixing it with the sawdust to create compost. There are farmers in Vietnam who mix it with rice hulls and raise chickens on it. Poor people eat duckweed in Cambodia and Africa. The Aztecs used to do stuff with it. You can buy it at Walmart to put in an aquarium.
@Colin Kelley no sir, I know what I saw inside of the containers. I also know the difference between duckweed and algae. Thank you though, but it is algae
@@Hunting2Restore Sorry, I went back and looked at it again. At 10.08 minutes into it, where a stream of water is going into that pond you can very clearly see the individual duck weed plants and there is no algae. It is really really clear this is duck weed. Nothing personal. It is what it is.
@@colinkelley6493 I believe They are talking about the algae in the Barrel.
Your films are amazing!
I'm really looking forward to hearing about that mass-timber social housing project.
Bardzo ładne! Dziękuję! Good 😊 Year!
GREAT Design!
I built a 12 x 12 foot pit greenhouse in rural Missouri in the USA with concrete walls. It was five feet deep in the earth. The floor was 56 degrees year round. It was incredibly energy efficient. The glazing was angled to optimise light gathering at the coldest time of the year for the latitude.
hi, miss dirksen, good job, congratulations for family
Just perfect in every way - wow
Vaig estar a Valldaura Labs fa cosa d'un mes a traves de la universitat; molt inspirador el lloc i la mentalitat de buscar noves formes d'habitar en major corcondància amb la natura aprofitant la ciència i l'arquitectura, increïble!!
The greenhouse of my dreams.
No audio. In & out, still no audio.
It's not them, it's fine for everyone else. Check your system?
Amazing video!
Quite an impressive project they have going on. I've never seen plants growing in pure sawdust , I think the wood will steal most of the nitrogen the plants need for their development.
There was Soil beneath the wood chips they were more a mulch helps to hold the moisture!
They are being fed nitrogen and other nutrients through the water. I think the wood chips don't steal very much.
Very interesting and amazing.
Happy New Year to all
This looks like an incredible amount of effort to some thing that costs next to nothing to do on flatter ground.
It's something that's got feasibility in cities but to do this if you've got even just 1/4 acre or a back yard it would more than likely be a passion project but it's still an awesome greenhouse
Cool. Hydroponics. It works in a limited way or in mass. Just a quick observation for the people in the greenhouse; you should put in a small dumb waiter/elevator to eliminate the need to walk up and down the embankment. You could power the elevator with a pulley system so you wouldn't need to use electricity.
Just brilliant!
very cool! really enjoyed this.
So beautiful
Wow, Incredible!!!!!!!!!
This is how we need to be growing our food so that we can leave more land for nature. Not sure why they built it behind a tree tho.
It's really good for people living in cities to be growing some of their food, not least because it helps them understand the energy and effort needed to provide our food, and it keeps the limitations of nature in mind.
great drone footage
really cool! thanks
Me eyes were immediately drawn to the window design, so glad you deep dived the topic.
I was surprised to see a permanent gap between the windows. I would think they would use a microcontroller, sensors, and servos to open and completely close off windows to regulate the temperature and humidity of the space, especially in winter. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Interesting to use saw dust and wood chips as a medium to hold water. Just would have to make sure that it was untreated wood
An awful lot of resources went into making that greenhouse and I get the impression it's main produce is a few leaves for a salad!
How do they prevent temperature swings - since they have so little thermal mass to moderate the temp swings? And each window is open in the bottom so warm air and cold air will vent out or be lost to conduction on the single layer glazing?
Indeed, wintertime growing greens would be a struggle because lots of the vegetables need warmth in order to grow. Interesting idea though.
Mediterranean climate near Barcelona what works there wouldn’t work everywhere else in the world!
I can imagine they are growing in accordance to the season so the plants are naturally accustomed to the weather
Hi from north al. I miss Florida.
I noticed heavy soiling on the solar panels (on top of Voxel Quarantine building). May I suggest you to tilt the solar panels (approx 10 degree) to allow rainwater to flow, instead of accumulating on the solar panel surface.
Solar spectrum helps garden growth
Cool looking greenhouse. But I would be scared as hell walking around that structure. The clamps holding those windows don't look very strong and after a couple of seasons with rain, then they'll fail catastrophically
Omg love his accent ❤
I don't understand why they left big gaps where the wall windows overlap. Normally a greenhouse is designed so that it can be sealed airtight on cold nights but there appears to be no way to close these gaps as needed.
Look up the climate info on Barcelona. These plants could be growing outdoors, they are not fragile tropical specimens.
Fallen logs also provide food eventually for birds and insects if left where they fall.
Nice project.
Just I always wonder why people using white/half transparent water tanks. As you can already see, the algy is already thriving inside. The tanks are super difficult to clean and the tanks will much sooner become a sturdy piece of trash then a black water tank for a few euro more.
I pray that a new way of building continues and catches on for the rest of the world
Al costat de casa i no sabia q es feia aquesta mena de treballs. Molt interessant.
Totalment!
the german dude looks like a time traveller from the 80's
I have read that hydroponics grows plants which are less nutrient full. I would like to see a video that confirms that hydro grown matches soil grown.
Gorgeous, but, why not trim that tree blocking the light to the greenhouse??
Maybe to profite of a bit of shade in summer, when it is baking hot...?
I’m really interested in the PV panels. I’m frantically trying to find PV panel theater allow light to pass through between the cells.
0:39 Broken ladder rung, it was a good idea to edit the near-fall out lol.
Wonderful project, but not an environmentally friendly way of producing food. When I look at all the costs of the plant to produce a few leaves of lettuce. Unfortunately, it has nothing to do with a possible cost-effective way of producing food to feed us. Thanks for the video.
I wonder if the water holding tanks could be converted into an aquarium and placed within a solar structure. This would enable some fish farming and proving the plants with nutrients from the fish waste.
Please ask them specifically who makes those solar panels. I LOVE the idea of staggered panels to let light through in a greenhouse roof. And those with the checkered box pattern appear to be ideal. I would love to know who makes them so that I can get specs and potentially buy them.
Me too but no reply! I want them on my greenhouse
i would love to make a mini one of these for all my seedlings. but i'd have to heat it to so it doesn't get too cold
Wouldnt plants need their nutrients from soil instead of sawdust?
Now I want a garden. In my house. This may be an issue for my wife. I will update.
id like to know how they dont have sick plants from using that dirty hyrdo tank? i havnt used hyrdo systems in years maybe theres new tecs?
ty..xoxo 🥰👍✌🤟🖐🤪
Hello, what about _transparency_ ? Where come's from the money ? How are taken decisions ? What is the cost of the structure ? Productivity per € spent ?
As someone who has an aquaponics farm, I approve. However I see many inefficiencies in his design; good start though.
I love the idea but those LED lights should be much closer to the greens. they won't provide nearly as much energy when they are so far away.
3:39 did anyone catch the business name of the solar panels that are made on clear bases specifically for greenhouses?
Hi, can we find out where we got those solar panels? Those exact transparent ones?
What was the glazing they used
Pity we can’t survive just on salad. Can they grow other things. Does this mean leaving the actual land for animal farming?
these kinda weak LED strips seem way to far away to make a notable impact on growth
Would have loved to see some yield numbers.
The view of the crop is shown, it's hard to get a consistent yield when experiments are in place but they possibly have a rough draft of those numbers 😅🤓
If this guy says “like “ one more time, give him a copy to listen to for a hour
When i'll get taller, i'll invent something i'll call the liquid water 😁
Solar panels perform best with lower temps. I'd think the greenhouse would raise solar panel temps, reducing efficiency.
is this the guy that built the DIY climbing board near the kale garden?
No, the one who built it is another person .
Silly question. Why do you need a greenhouse in Spain? Does it even freeze there?
sometime it freeze. And the prototype is to be used in the city