• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Skip to navigation
Close Ad

The Spoon

Daily news and analysis about the food tech revolution

  • Home
  • Podcasts
  • Events
  • Newsletter
  • Connect
    • Custom Events
    • Slack
    • RSS
    • Send us a Tip
  • Advertise
  • Consulting
  • About
The Spoon
  • Home
  • Podcasts
  • Newsletter
  • Events
  • Advertise
  • About

Freight Farms Raises a $15M Series B Round for Its Vertical Farming Platform

by Jennifer Marston
February 12, 2020February 11, 2020Filed under:
  • Ag Tech
  • Business of Food
  • Delivery & Commerce
  • Featured
  • Funding
  • Modern Farmer
  • Vertical Farming
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)
  • Click to email this to a friend (Opens in new window)

Freight Farms announced today it has raised a $15 million series B round led by Ospraie Ag Science, according to a press release emailed to The Spoon. The round also saw participation from existing investor Spark Capital and brings Boston-based Freight Farms’ total funding thus far to $28 million.

When we checked in with Freight Farms last year, cofounder Brad McNamara said the company was “rearchitecting the whole concept of vertical farming.” Freight Farms was at the time making its farms, which are housed in shipping containers, more modular to accommodate a variety of crops as well as more efficient when it came to how much energy the LEDs on the farm use. Freight Farms launched its 320-sq-foot Greenery farm in 2019 that included these improvements as well as farmhand, the company’s IoT platform built in-house and used to monitor and manage the lifecycle of crops.

Since then, Freight Farms has expanded its reach to 44 U.S. states and 25 countries, and now serves a range of businesses and institutions, from small-business farmers to grocery retailers like Meijer and QSRs like Wendy’s.

Earlier this year, the company announced a partnership with foodservice and facilities management company Sodexo to bring vertical farms to K-12 schools and college campuses around the U.S. 

Freight Farms will use the new funds to further develop and advance the technology behind its farms. As mentioned above, this technology is built in-house and meant to be interoperable, which is a departure from a lot of other vertical farms, which often gather off-the-shelf components from various third-party manufacturers and string them together to create a system. While that method works, McNamara told me last year that it also comes with the risk of interoperability issues (the various pieces can’t “talk” to one another as easily) and can sometimes cost more to run. He also noted it’s easier to automate the entire farm when all tech is in house.

And since vertical farming as a whole has yet to prove itself as economically scalable on a large scale, we’re going to hear a lot more about automation in the coming months as Freight Farms and others develop new tools to try and bring the cost of farming down.    



Related

Get the Spoon in your inbox

Just enter your email and we’ll take care of the rest:

Find us on some of these other platforms:

  • Apple Podcasts
  • Spotify
Tagged:
  • Freight Farms
  • vertical farmin

Post navigation

Previous Post Small Robot Company Gets £200,000 VC Investment, Surpasses Equity Crowdfunding Goal
Next Post Yo-Kai Express Opens up its Automated Hot Ramen Machine at SFO

Reader Interactions

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Get The Spoon in Your Inbox

The Spoon Podcast Network!

Feed your mind! Subscribe to one of our podcasts!

How ReShape is Using AI to Accelerate Biotech Research
How Eva Goulbourne Turned Her ‘Party Trick’ Into a Career Building Sustainable Food Systems
Combustion Acquires Recipe App Crouton
Next-Gen Fridge Startup Tomorrow Shuts Down
From Starday to Shiru to Givaudan, AI Is Now Tablestakes Across the Food Value Chain

Footer

  • About
  • Sponsor the Spoon
  • The Spoon Events
  • Spoon Plus

© 2016–2025 The Spoon. All rights reserved.

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
loading Cancel
Post was not sent - check your email addresses!
Email check failed, please try again
Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email.