Gardening in the Growing
Greenhouse
| Over the last few years, Growing Dome greenhouse owners have
experimented and found the Growing Dome to be a wonderful
space for year-round indoor gardening. Greenhouse gardening is
a little different than growing outside. The protected
environment has its own unique qualities. |
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- Winter
Growing
- Cooling the Greenhouse
WINTER
GROWING
The principle of winter growing is that we are trying to
capture the heat of the sun in the day and store it inside
the greenhouse and slow down the heat loss at night, thus
maintaining an ambient overnight temperature, which would
support year-round growing. The Growing Dome accomplishes
this in the following manner:
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During the day when the interior to the greenhouse is hot,
we have an under soil heating system. This heating system
consists of a solar powered fan, which is driven by a
photovoltaic panel and the panel creates electricity to
drive the fan, which blows hot air through ducts buried in
the floor underneath the growing beds. Thus, all day long we
are blowing hot air through the soil, creating soil heating.
The growing beds, which are usually raised beds, are also
insulated to prevent heat loss to the outside of the
structure. This soil heating system is entirely free, as it
uses no energy other than that of the sun.
The next way of storing solar energy inside the greenhouse
is the use of a large water tank. This water tank has a
primary purpose of storing solar energy simply by absorbing
the sun's rays. The low winter sun shines on the dark
painted metal tank, which absorbs heat all day long and at
night releases this heat back into the greenhouse structure.
Heat loss during the cold winter nights is prevented or
slowed down by the following methods: Firstly, energy
efficient polycarbonate glazing consisting of either twin
wall or triple wall polycarbonate structured sheets is used
for the glazing of the dome structure. Secondly, the north
wall of the structure is insulated with foil-faced bubble
packed insulation panels covering the northern two fifths of
the dome. These also slow down the heat loss at night.
The dome also has perimeter insulation which prevents frost
penetrating under the wall of the dome, thus with a solar
design we create a greenhouse structure that will continue
to allow cool weather plants to grow throughout the winter.
In very cold climates the solar energy can be augmented with
the use of a small greenhouse heater, which is
thermostatically controlled. The Growing Dome greenhouse is
very energy efficient. Therefore, as the greenhouse heater
is thermostatically regulated, only a small amount of heat
is needed to keep the dome at the required ambient
temperature. We calculate that the Growing Dome needs only ¼
of the amount of heat required by a conventional greenhouse
structure.
Cooling the Greenhouse:
In the summer all greenhouses will get hot, and most
commercial and hobby greenhouses have either a ceiling fan or
a ducted fan or an exhaust fan to cool the structure. The
Growing Dome, however, uses four main methods of cooling which
mainly use solar energy.
The first method is the Growing Dome has automatic vents - two
at the top, two at the bottom. These are solar powered and
consist of a solar vent actuator which opens the vents at a
pre-determined temperature. The vent actuators are controlled
by a tube of wax, which expands when the greenhouse gets hot.
As it expands it pushes out a piston that operates a vent
actuator and opens the vent. There is a chimney effect whereby
the hot air escapes through the top vents and cool air comes
in through the lower vents to replace it.
Secondly, the domes have an exhaust fan, which generally is
solar powered. A solar panel drives the exhaust fan, which
brings in extra cool air and is a thermostatically controlled
cooling fan. Also, some people have installed ceiling fans to
help exhaust the hot air through the ceiling of the Growing
Dome. These are usually mains powered ceiling fans.
Thirdly, the water tank, itself, in the summer sits in the
shade of the north wall insulation and keeps the dome cool.
This solar cooling is very, very effective as there is a large
amount of water. The mid-size dome has a thousand gallon water
tank. This can become a water garden if you wish and you can
grow aquatic plants, water plants, raise fish, and it creates
a beautiful above ground pond.
The fourth method of solar cooling inside the greenhouse is
the use of the under soil fan system whereby we blow hot air
through the cool soil all day long that the sun shines, thus
helping to cool the domes greenhouse structure. However, what
we have found that in the summer, luxuriant plant growth
shades the soil thus helping to keep the dome cool in the
summer, and the plants themselves act as evaporative coolers.
These methods of climate control have proved to be an
essential part of the greenhouse design and help to create
optimal plant growth for organic vegetables and flowers.
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