Growing Zones

Five zones, three microclimates, 367 square feet. Each zone has distinct temperature, humidity, and light characteristics driven by wall orientation, proximity to the house, tree shade, and equipment placement.

Zone Map

ZoneLaunch StatusCharacterPeak TempCrop-Control Status
SouthActive ControlThe furnace — hottest at noon100°F+1 active-control crop: canna
EastActive ControlThe cool corridor — hydro system~91°F3 active-control crops: lettuce, pepper, strawberry
WestObserved/ReferenceThe longest wall — versatileMid-rangeNo active-control crop; candidate shelf crops only
NorthEquipment OnlyShared with house — thermal buffer93°F (2 PM)No planting — equipment only
CenterOffline / PlannedFog machine location, mixing zoneNo active-control crop; orchids are planned/observed only

Active-control crop count source: occupied v_position_current crop records in online growing zones. Center is excluded because center drip is disconnected and the zone is offline.

The Three Microclimates

At any given moment, there can be a 9°F difference between the hottest and coolest zones in 367 square feet. This stratification is an asset — it lets us match crops to their preferred conditions. South (Hot + Dry): Peak solar gain at the tapered south end. The exhaust path terminates here, with fans mounted high on the southwest and southeast angled faces. Concrete slab retains heat overnight. VPD runs highest. Reserved for heat-lovers. East (Cool + Humid): Tree shade blocks morning solar. Patio door provides cross-ventilation. Hydroponic evaporation adds local humidity. The most comfortable zone for plants. West (Moderate + Versatile): Longest wall, best grow light coverage, afternoon sun exposure. Neither the hottest nor coolest — handles the widest range of crops.

Airflow Path

North Intake

24"×24" mechanical vent plus passive exchange through the house door.

East Intake

Patio door becomes the dominant summer intake when the glass insert is removed.

Center Mixing

Fog machine and center misters condition air as it moves through the room.

South Exhaust

Two high-mounted exhaust fans pull up to 4,900 CFM through the angled south faces.

Full air exchange every 44 seconds when both fans are running. In summer, the patio door is the dominant intake (not the north vent), creating an asymmetric east/NE-to-south airflow path.

Zone Sensor Coverage

ZoneProbeAddressAdditional Sensors
SouthTzone RS485 SHT3XModbus 4Soil (SEN0601: moisture, temp, EC)
EastTzone RS485 SHT3XModbus 5YINMIK hydro (pH, EC, TDS, ORP, water temp), Soil (SEN0600: moisture, temp)
WestTzone RS485 SHT3XModbus 3Soil (SEN0600: moisture, temp)
NorthTzone RS485 SHT3XModbus 2CO₂ (analog), Lux (LDR)
CenterNone (calculated avg)
OutdoorTempest + intake (OFFLINE)20 weather metrics
→ See Climate at 5,000 Feet for the full thermal analysis. → See Physical Structure for dimensions and wall specs.