Design of A Mushroom Farm:Spawn Lab - Mushroom Farmer Life
Design of A Mushroom Farm:Spawn Lab - Mushroom Farmer Life
Design of A Mushroom Farm:Spawn Lab - Mushroom Farmer Life
For the design of our mushroom farm, I found very precious the instructions from Paul Stamets books “Growing
Gourmet and Medicinal Mushrooms” and “The Mushroom Cultivator”, Specifically, Appendix I for mushroom farm design
overview, Appendix II for spawn lab design, Appendix III for fruiting chamber design. These 25 pages may seem
overwhelming at first, but there is a great amount of detail about the setup and materials well needed if you are
building one, I’ll summarize here.
The setup is in two complexes, ideally in separate buildings. If you are building a small scale farm, you may not need all
the mentioned spaces, just the essentials (in bold).
Fruiting room(s),
Inoculation room,
Pasteurization room,
Main corridor,
Packing room,
Refrigeration room,
Boiler room,
Office, etc.
These spaces are articulated in an overall design that optimize sterility and substrate circulation. Mushroom farming
benefit from space compartmentalization, that allows the application of few useful design idea, such as:
Three doors from outdoor to HEPA flow: Stamets recommends having three doors to cross to reach the flow hood
room from the outdoor air. This can be integrated in the farm design, e.g. by using an incubation room as an ante-
room.
Separate inoculation and fructification: inoculation is the main source of contaminants in mushroom farming.
Stamets recommends separate building for spawn lab and growing room. When possible I would also place
pasteurization, inoculation, incubation of pasteurized bag away from the fruiting room.
Exploit airflow : Stamets recommends a hepa filtered positive pressured lab. This filtered clean air can be recycled
in the incubation room, and then in the preparation space, creating a continuous flow opposing the entry of
contaminants. Additionally, it is possible to recycle the steam from sterilization processes by injecting it in the
fruiting room. The fruiting room is kept at a relative negative pressure, in order not to disperse mushroom and
contaminants spores in the rest of the farm/lab. For example, see on the picture of the article on our two
setups, the airflow crossing each room, indicated by arrows.
The farm components mentioned by Stamets apply to all scales. Small home scale projects have similar components
than industrial-scale huge projects but use very different equipment (see equipment page). These components are
the following :
1. Preparation space : this is where the substrate is prepared, weighted, watered, mixed, sometimes bagged. It may
include the sterilization as well, that Stamets calls Boiler room or Pasteurization room. If you work at home, this is
typically done in the kitchen. If you make a small farm, this will look like a kitchen: sink, stove, pressure cooker,
table, etc.
2. Lab – Sterile inoculation room: is the cleanest room, used for How to Grow Mus…
inoculation on front of a HEPA flow hood or inside a glovebox.
Typically this room is air-tight positively pressured with a HEPA
filtered clean air. This room may include the incubation space in the
same room. If you work at home, you may choose the more
contaminant free room, e.g. living room, bedroom, office (no
kitchen, no bathroom, no plants around). If you make a small farm,
this may look like a closed clean room with hepa filtered ventilation. See more details on sterile room design later
on this page.
3. Incubation space: Sometimes inside the sterile room, a natural extension of it. After inoculation, the blocks
require space on a shelf in a clean room. It is a critical phase until the mycelium takes hold of the substrate. They
need a little ventilation and no light. At home, incubation can be in the same room than inoculation, preferably in
a closed but not air tight closet. At small farm scale, a closed room with shelves and controlled ventilation may be
needed.
4. Fruiting room: The block is moved into the fruiting room when it is ready to fruit. The room is ventilated and
humidified about 80%, sometimes heated or cooled. It must provide sufficient natural or artificial light for the
mushroom species. The walls and floor must withstand moisture, and be easy to clean. At home, typically this is
the basement, as it has sufficient light and a natural good temperature and moisture. A ventilator and a
humidifier are used to condition the environment. Shelves are used to place the blocks. See more details on
fruiting room design later on this page.
Fruiting Room Example 1: In our growing space, we ventilate our 4x5m fruiting room with 2x Rucks 150L (770m3/h)
ventilators 1/4 of the time. We humidify with an InkBird humidistat ,2x 3 cell ultrasound humidifiers, and a 12cm
extractor fan. We recirculate with multiple 15-25cm fans. See this setup video.
Fruiting Room Example 2: Mossy Creek Mushrooms blog has an article describing their growing space. They explain
how they control air, light, humidity and their original and inexpensive shelfing system.
1. Relaxation : Because growing things can be hard work on your body, a comfortable resting space with music
and couch was always included in our projects. It’s a also a good place for mushroom growing books, and
possibly an office corner to write, etc.
1. Storage space : You may have a lot of substrates to store waiting to process. Straw takes a lot of space. There is
other things to store as well : sawdust, grain, bran, gypsum, lime, etc. All these are dusty and may attract
insects: airtight barrels advised. Organize the storage to be regularly inspected for presence of insects, mold,
etc.
1. DIY corner: If you are going to build from scratch many things like we do, a dedicated DIY corner is a good
addition to the farm: to store all the tools, a table to work on it, and consistent storage space for recycling
materials.
1. Product Storage: Depending on your scale, storing fresh mushrooms can become a problem if you are not
prepared for it. Mushroom takes space to store, i.e. 10L per kg of clustered mushrooms. At home, you may find
an extra fridge handful. At small scale, one or two large fridges can suffice. At a bigger scale, it’s worth
building a walk in rather than taking more fridges.
Fridges require continuous monitoring as they may get out of balance when too full, poorly ventilated, too
empty, or opened too often. You want to avoid that the mushrooms freeze, get wet or slowly dry.
Be prepared also to transform your product, from canning with vinegar in glass jars to drying mushrooms.
They store a long time like that room temperature, but still benefit from cooling. Dry mushrooms are best
kept in deep freeze.
1. Outdoor preparation : While some aspects of mushroom cultivation are ultra clean and sterile, others are
very dirty and dusty. You may need exterior space for those. One of the worst jobs is to chip the straw yourself
(see our video). Other dirty/dusty works may include DIY works, transferring straw, sawdust, grain in bulk, etc.
You may want to protect yourself with a mask. It is best for your lab to move a maximum of these activities
outdoor.
1. Outdoor recapture: If you have space and time, you can make an outdoor recapture space where you move the
blocks after 1-3 harvest in the fruiting chamber. They will continue producing at a lower rate, with a higher
contamination rate. This space won’t be as productive but will provide extra mushrooms for free. Later on, when
the block is completely dry or overcome with contaminants, it can be composted. At home, the recapture space
can be a shade house in the garden, where the block spends some time, before being used on the soil as mulch on
in the compost. As small scale farm, we donate our used blocks to gardens and people to learn and experiment, get
some mushrooms before composting them.