CUBES Circle research farm: test operation has started

Space-saving, energy-efficient, resource-saving, mobile and stackable - this is how researchers at Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin (HU) envision food production in the city of the future.

Test operations have started at the CUBES Circle research farm on the HU campus
Test operations have started at the CUBES Circle research farm on the HU campus in Dahlem. Photo: CUBES Circle
In April 2023, the research farm on the HU campus in Berlin-Dahlem celebrated its topping-out ceremony. The outdoor facility has now been completed, while the scientists inside are working on optimising the individual modules and their control systems and gradually getting production up and running. Fish farming, insect and plant production are already running in test mode.

Since 2016, a team led by Christian Ulrichs, Professor of Urban Ecophysiology of Plants, has been developing a system consisting of three digitally networked modules, known as CUBES: Fish grow in one (FishCUBE), vegetables are grown in the next (PlantCUBE) and in the third, black soldier fly larvae refine biomass into nutritious proteins and fats (InsectCUBE). The speciality: Following nature’s example, the substances are recycled. The nutrient-rich fish water fertilises the plants, the insects feed on the plant waste and fish food is obtained from the insect larvae. The cycle is controlled automatically. Circular bioeconomy - this is what the researchers call the basic principle according to which the plant will produce food and raw materials, but zero waste.

Since the topping-out ceremony a year and a half ago, the team of agricultural scientists, aquaculture experts, data analysts, engineers and social scientists has made significant progress. After months of experimentation, larvae of the black soldier fly were produced in a first test run. The result: the system still needs to be adapted and improved so that the emissions can also be fed into the cycle as a resource in the future. At the same time, tests are being carried out to show to what extent grasshoppers and mealworms are also suitable for producing fish feed from the plant waste produced during vegetable cultivation. A licence to keep predatory catfish (Clarias) in the fish tanks has already been granted by the authority, so that after lengthy investigations into the ideal composition of the fish feed, the test operation has now begun.

The growth trials in vegetable cultivation, in which the plant physiologists tested different light qualities and nutrient compositions in order to maximise yields and optimally control the plants’ nutrients, have also made good progress. In one half of the greenhouse, tomato plants have now been placed in the water-bearing channels, where they are supplied with the necessary nutrients. The other half of the greenhouse is intended for scientific experiments - the vegetable breeding laboratory - and is currently being set up. Further plants are to be tested here for their suitability for the recirculation system.

The concept of stackable, networked CUBES for food production is intended to help make intensive agricultural production more sustainable in future and reduce emissions and harmful environmental impacts, while at the same time generating high yields of high quality on a small area.