Robohub.org
 

Urban vegetable garden system with LED lighting


by
10 March 2014



share this:
Keystone_Urban_Gardening_System

Keystone Technology’s LED vegetable garden system is a cultivation system for indoor plant factories that uses LED lighting instead of sunlight. The most defining feature of the system on display at the company’s showroom in Yokohama is its 3-dimensional use of space. “This is a 5-tiered cultivation system. For smaller heads of lettuce, you can harvest about 1,500 heads in one month. If this were to be fit into a container of about 20 feet (6m), it would be equivalent to 970 sq. meters. Thus with 16 sq. meters, you could produce an amount that is on par with 970 sq. meters.”

LED lighting has three different wavelengths of red, blue, and green. This system can control the illumination strength according to the stage of plant growth. So, cultivation that would require two and a half months with land cultivation can be reduced to less than one month of cultivation and harvesting.

“In most cases, lettuce grown indoors is crisper and does not have the coarse quality of lettuce grown in sunlight. Because it is softer, it is a vegetable that is easy to eat even for elderly people. Although this may be unexpected, as for the nutritional components or more accurately the functional ingredients, it is possible to obtain a larger content by percentage of vitamins and polyphenols than with vegetables grown in sunlight.”

With this system, there will be differences in production capacity depending on the shape of the plant. Because plants with leaves that spread sideways take up more space, the number of such stalks that can be cultivated is reduced. On the other hand, plants that grow upwards can be planted with smaller intervals so a greater number of stalks can be cultivated.

“This plant factory itself has been here for over 20 years, but there is very little history of plants grown with LED lighting. In particular for plants grown with red, blue, and green lighting, the produce displayed at a plant factory exhibition in July 2010 was our company’s first ever.”

Commercially available since 2010, this system has been installed in various factories, offices and eateries nationwide, such as by a leading eating establishment that has installed 48 units in its processing factory in Kanagawa Prefecture. As workers in Japan’s agricultural industry age, it is becoming more difficult to obtain safe and delicious vegetables through traditional farming techniques. Keystone Technology will continue to offer new lifestyle ideas that provide cities with production capacity and integrate consumption and production.

 

 



tags: , , ,


DigInfo TV is a Tokyo-based online video news platform dedicated to producing original coverage of cutting edge technology, research and products from Japan.
DigInfo TV is a Tokyo-based online video news platform dedicated to producing original coverage of cutting edge technology, research and products from Japan.





Related posts :



Robot Talk Episode 134 – Robotics as a hobby, with Kevin McAleer

  21 Nov 2025
In the latest episode of the Robot Talk podcast, Claire chatted to Kevin McAleer from kevsrobots about how to get started building robots at home.

ACM SIGAI Autonomous Agents Award 2026 open for nominations

  19 Nov 2025
Nominations are solicited for the 2026 ACM SIGAI Autonomous Agents Research Award.

Robot Talk Episode 133 – Creating sociable robot collaborators, with Heather Knight

  14 Nov 2025
In the latest episode of the Robot Talk podcast, Claire chatted to Heather Knight from Oregon State University about applying methods from the performing arts to robotics.

CoRL2025 – RobustDexGrasp: dexterous robot hand grasping of nearly any object

  11 Nov 2025
A new reinforcement learning framework enables dexterous robot hands to grasp diverse objects with human-like robustness and adaptability—using only a single camera.

Robot Talk Episode 132 – Collaborating with industrial robots, with Anthony Jules

  07 Nov 2025
In the latest episode of the Robot Talk podcast, Claire chatted to Anthony Jules from Robust.AI about their autonomous warehouse robots that work alongside humans.

Teaching robots to map large environments

  05 Nov 2025
A new approach could help a search-and-rescue robot navigate an unpredictable environment by rapidly generating an accurate map of its surroundings.



 

Robohub is supported by:




Would you like to learn how to tell impactful stories about your robot or AI system?


scicomm
training the next generation of science communicators in robotics & AI


 












©2025.05 - Association for the Understanding of Artificial Intelligence