A Portable Hanging Herb Garden for Inner-City Dwellers

The dream of any inner-city or spatially-challenged dweller with a green thumb, finely tuned tastebuds and no backyard.

Jennifer Jones
Published on October 17, 2011

Czech designer Kristyna Pojerova's latest creation ticks all the boxes - it's convenient, portable, aesthetically appealing, and it's green, too. Harmoniously combining simplicity with beauty, practicality with ethicality, her portable glasshouse is the dream of any inner-city or spatially-challenged dweller with a green thumb, finely tuned tastebuds and no backyard. It is a glass structure with four small holes for air as well as a large hole in the middle for easy access that is mounted onto a lightbulb and uses the excess heat to create a fertile and natural microclimate within it for growing herbs.

Not only is it practical and eco-friendly, but it lends a homely atmosphere to your kitchen - a modern version of flowers-in-a-jam-jar-on-the-window-sill, if you will. Going to a dinner party and panicking about what to take? Why not take your portable herb garden. It's a culinary novelty and a segue into discussions regarding Eastern European design and innovation all in one. Do you often worry that your kitchen does not exude an ethos? These hanging herbs will add an element of environmental consciousness in a creative and thoughtful manner. Enraged about the recent passing of the Carbon Tax? Ensure that your electricity bills at least contribute towards your garden as well as your cravings for coriander.

Utility aside, the glasshouse reminds me of designs such as these Icelandic moss rings and similar micro gardening products, which are quite beautiful, albeit ironic, in the way they try to bring us back to nature by bringing an instrumentalised microcosm of nature to us. This glasshouse has the same aroma of sweetness and nostalgia as does making your own strawberry jam from scratch, or knitting a scarf for winter. And while Pojerova states "all this is basically about making use of the otherwise useless waste heat of the (light) bulb", for all its practically and ecological benefits, this grandma element seems to me to be its true allure.

Published on October 17, 2011 by Jennifer Jones
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