Aquaponics in Domes? No! No! No!
– by Colle and Phyllis Davis
If you decide to send us an angry note telling us we’re wrong, please attach YOUR photograph of a green, lush, thriving aquaponics system within a dome and we’ll post it on our website along with your information.
WHY do we not recommend installing aquaponics systems within domes?
Fuller has been called a ‘practical philosopher’ who experimented with ideas to simplify them and make them functional and easy to assemble. Fuller held 28 patents, wrote 28 books, and received 47 honorary degrees from universities around the world. His true aim was to create ideas that encouraged sustainability on the planet. (To read the amazing biography of Buckminster Fuller: CLICK HERE.)
Domes became popular for ‘homes’ from the mid-1960s to the mid-1970s, but the shape of a dome house makes it difficult to build and to live in1:
Domes are fantastic for enclosing space. They are not fun to live in because the sound and smell is all over the place and the heat all goes to the top and you have to find some way to push it down to the floor.
However, there must be a new ‘dome-wind blowing’ because we are receiving at least three to five requests per week on, ‘How large of a PFAS Module can I put into this size dome?
If you are an incredibly adept carpenter and can make a curved grow table that is level in all directions, you may want to build a 3 ft wide tray around the outside edge of the dome or make a nice rectangular tray that take up the middle of the entire floor space. If not, please consider a rectangular building to house your farm, they are much easier to build, easier to heat and an easier space to install an aquaponics system.
Portable Farms’ suggestion is to build a rectangular building that will house a grow tray Module of sufficient size to feed your family. This shape has many advantages over a dome. It will be cheaper, easier to build, easier to control the interior environment and far easier to plant and harvest the bounty produced by your aquaponics system.
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Your Company makes "a" system that is not conducive to be adapted to a dome.
While many other Companies make systems for domes.
So do you want photos of those systems or just if somebody tried to install your system in a dome ?
Dennis
Dennis,
Many people have adapted aquaponics to domes. It is not our system specifically that is an odd fit for domes, it the lack of flat surfaces. Putting a rectangle inside a dome takes up a large amount of floor space. I love domes and we are building one next summer, but the extra work involved in making Grow Tables that curve or take up most of the space does not make sense to us.
Because we do not recommend domes to house our systems, no we do not want photos of current systems that are not PDAS technology. Thanks.
Colle