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Are you interested in setting up an aeroponic Tower Farm? We can assist you with that! Agrotonomy Corp has partnered with True Garden Ltd. @truegardenaz for the development of Tower Farms outside the USA and Canada. 🌍
Together, we have set up Tower Farms indoors and outdoors in the USA, in Europe, in the Middle East, in Africa, Southeast Asia, and South America. While True Garden handles Tower Farm greenhouse training at our facility in Mesa Arizona for our worldwide clientele, Agrotonomy specializes in international onsite Tower Farm installation and staff training.
At True Garden and Agrotonomy, we also offer greenhouse consultation and purchasing services for international CEA projects. 🌱💚 We are international resellers of Tower Garden®️ & Tower Farms worldwide. In partnership with Agrotonomy, we can help you plan your Tower Farm and/or designing your greenhouse regardless of the scope and size of your project!
We can assist you in outsourcing the best quotes from reputable greenhouse manufacturers. From the US to the Netherlands, we are connected to the most experienced greenhouse manufacturers in our line of industry. We can consult with you from greenhouse conceptualization to supervising its implementation. Visit agrotonomy.com/ for more info!
Aside from an average of 75% space-saving, our towers allow to grow fruit, vegetables, herbs, and flowers using 95% less water than what is required to grow plants in the soil: these aeroponic towers are the perfect gardening and farming option for water restricted areas! Tower Farms by Tower Garden®️ are perfectly suitable for professional growers, charities, restaurants, hotels, schools, universities, cafeterias, convention centers, etc. They can be set up in a greenhouse, outdoors, on rooftops or indoors using a LED grow light kit.
Governor Moore visits the Strategic Partner Appreciation Event by Joe Andrucyk at BLU Crabhouse & Raw Bar, 2305 Philadelphia Ave, Ocean City, MD 21842,
The British Museum's Great Court.
Designed by Foster and Partners, engineered by Buro Happold and built by Waagner-Biro.
The first step in the recreation of the Great Court was the demolition of the undistinguished post-war buildings that served as bookstacks around the drum of the Reading Room. The southern portico, which was demolished to enlarge the Museum’s entrance hall in the 1870s, has been reinstated to a new design.
To allow the Great Court to be used no matter what the weather, it is covered with an undulating glazed roof. It has no visible supports to detract from the restoration of the classical facades around it. Instead it spans the gap between the facades and the drum of the Reading Room as a self-supporting structure.
The undulating, minimal steel latticework supports 3,312 unique triangular glass panels. Each one is different in size and shape because of the roof’s complex geometric form, which results from the fact that the Reading Room is not exactly in the centre of the Great Court, but is 5 metres closer to the northern portico. A specially written computer programme was required to work out the exact dimensions and angles of each panel, each of which has been sponsored by an individual or company.
[arquitecturaviva.com]
The PARTNERS Spring Luncheon benefiting the Jane and Robert Cizik School of Nursing at UTHealth Houston was held Tuesday, April 25, at the River Oaks Country Club. This year's luncheon was co-chaired by Susie Distefano, MSN, RN, and Trish Greaser and raised over $214,000 in support of scholarships, research, and Cizik School of Nursing programs. This year's honoree was Kathrine G. McGovern / John P. McGovern Foundation and the keynote speaker was Annie Griffiths, a National Geographic photographer. (Photography by Priscilla Dickson)
On Apr. 19, CFB thanked their community partners for the time and service given to the district. Diane Dobis was the recipient of the Frank Shor MTXE (Mental Toughness eXtra Effort) Award for going above and beyond in her volunteer time and efforts.
Photos by Shelley Gammon
www.thepartnerstrust.com ~ New Partners Trust office on Montana Avenue in Santa Monica, courtesy of Partners Trust's Alex Quaid.