Your leafy greens could be growing in a shipping container

We went behind the scenes with B3 Roots owner and operator Blake Bennett.

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B3 Roots grows unique greens like Astro and Wasabi arugula.

Photo by RALtoday

It’s always a perfect spring day at Blake Bennett’s farm. Seriously — it’s programmed that way.

Located in an unassuming shipping container south of Raleigh is B3 Roots , a fully-automated, vertical hydroponic farm filled from floor to ceiling with leafy greens. In just 320-sqft, Blake operates a three-acre farm from seed to harvest with no soil. He can grow more than 500 different crop varieties like arugula, lettuce, kale, chard, mustard, basil, and edible flowers.

All of the greens are harvested and delivered in less than a day to local families and restaurants around the Triangle including O-Ku , Hawthorne & Wood , and the soon-to-open East End Bistrot . This year, Blake plans to begin a regular greens donation to A Place At the Table .

Blake launched his farm in 2022 and will celebrate its one-year anniversary in February. For now, B3 is a one-man show, but he hopes to grow the farm to three shipping containers and hire employees.

Click through the gallery below to explore inside the farm. Then, check out what’s growing and place an order.

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Anne — originally from Annapolis, Maryland and based in Roanoke, Virginia — joined 6AM City as a City Editor for RALtoday in January 2022. She is a graduate of UNC-Chapel Hill and has contributed to publications including Garden & Gun and Washingtonian. When Anne’s not writing, she’s hiking through the Blue Ridge Mountains, practicing hot yoga, or finding her new favorite foodie spot.
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