The Atlantic’s CityLab names real estate developers and urban farmers as the newest odd couple.
“Environmentally conscious construction and building systems are old news at this point, but building-integrated food production is a relatively new, though growing, area of focus,” the article says.
Examples include the Stack House Apartments in Seattle’s South Lake Union neighborhood, where “residents can walk out onto a terrace and pluck a tomato right off the vine,” or the 8,000-square-foot hydroponic greenhouse atop an affordable housing development in the South Bronx, N.Y., which is “creating jobs and food for the residents below—along with cooler summers and warmer winters."