‘It’s good and nutritious’: New greenhouse set to open in Salluit

Local non-profit sets first harvest season for spring 2025

The Salluit greenhouse is set to open in October with its first official active season to start in spring 2025. (Photo courtesy of Sam Chauvette)

By Cedric Gallant - Local Journalism Initiative Reporter

A non-profit organization in Salluit is inching toward completing the community’s first greenhouse. It is set to be completed in October and ready for its opening harvest season in spring 2025.

The Society Promoting Food Safety in Salluit took on the project of building a greenhouse in 2018. At the helm is Stephen Grasser, who previously was at the Kativik Regional Government’s economic development department.

Stephen Grasser fills up the water tank that supplies the Salluit greenhouse. (Photo courtesy of Sam Chauvette)

“We wanted to look into various food security issues and make it a community initiative rather than an initiative of the Northern Village or the landholding corporation,” he said.

After creating a board of directors, applying for funding and waiting through a two-year COVID-19 pandemic hiatus, the project got going.

The group tried for two years to find a contractor to construct the greenhouse, to no avail. Eventually, they opted to train people locally on construction techniques and working with concrete.

“The idea behind the project is to get people enthusiastic about eating fresh vegetables and fresh fruit,” Grasser said.

For that reason, the greenhouse will have no rental fee for its users.

Grasser feels half the vegetable beds should be reserved for the community and given away to organizations like the daycare centre and the women’s shelter.

“I get so much food from our hunter support program,” Grasser said. “I want this to be seen as an analog to the hunter support program.”

Grasser estimates the project to have cost upward of $400,000.

“We got a lot of support from the construction companies,” he said, adding businesses and construction companies in town supported the project and offered labour to push it to its completion. 

Agronomist Sam Chauvette takes a moment inside the Kuujjuaq greenhouse as he is about to meet with local gardeners to discuss their gardens. (Photo by Cedric Gallant)

“Money is not everything in a project, it is the alliances you make.”

The greenhouse building has an advanced ventilation system, a complex living soil mixture with fungus and other organisms to make it good for long-term usage, and a concrete footing that is two feet wide.

It’s an “ultra-resistant” structure, said agronomist Sam Chauvette, a researcher at the Centre for Social Innovation in Agriculture, at Victoriaville Cégep.

He has had hands-on involvement in the creation and upkeep of both the Kuujjuaq and Kangiqsualujjuaq greenhouses, and now has worked closely with Grasser for the newest addition in Salluit.

Chauvette visits all three communities a few weeks at a time, every year. While there, he offers activities to youth and garden enthusiasts about plant life cycles, how to use the tools, and how to own and take care of hydroponic gardens at home.

In contrast to Salluit, the Kuujjuaq greenhouse, established in 2015, is run by the town. Its board has to take most of its decisions to the person responsible at the Northern Village.

There are 45 plots available, which are all taken either by individuals or organizations. Priority is given to people who have always been residents of Kuujjuaq, then priority is given in order of how long the person has lived in the community, starting with over 10 years down to three years.

The exterior of one of the two greenhouse buildings in Kuujjuaq. They house 45 plots of soil available for people to grow food. (Photo by Cedric Gallant)

However, Chauvette said he has seen how difficult it is to maintain a consistent volunteer-based staff to take care of the greenhouse full time.

He wishes that at least two people could share the 50-hour-a-week workload that maintenance requires, so that there is consistent care for the plants and soil.

That said, Chauvette expressed enthusiasm for the fruits of the labour.

“This crunch, this taste, it’s good and nutritious,” he said as he ate a cucumber freshly harvested.

“There is a great variety of things that can be grown here, so why not do it?”

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(6) Comments:

  1. Posted by Kuujjuaq on

    The $350,000.00 Hydroponic Container next to the local gas station collecting dust. Another pile of $$$$ wasted.

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    • Posted by Andrew on

      I used to work there. I learned the produce sold at the store is sold mainly to non-beneficiaries. Funding provider even tried asking the grocer to record beneficiary numbers at the till. It does not make a profit, but it brings in customers who will buy more things off the shelf.

  2. Posted by Tooma on

    That’s what they did in Arviat. Hired southerner to work on it built a greenhouse but it’s gone. That’s why they like here, make it possible to have like a someone to look up to, those hamlets they put their image on locals ideas and really that kind of attitude when they suppose focus on their work instead of locals family or there image put on hamlet.

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  3. Posted by Colin on

    People need to know how many months of the year it operates, how it’s lighted and heated, and at what cost. It looks like another boondoggle. ???

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  4. Posted by Andrew on

    My 15 min guess
    INITIAL COSTS
    Coordinator: $38/hr lets say 8 weeks total – $20,000
    Blueprints/ engineering: $55,000 if customized
    Purchase of materials/ building: $160,000
    Gravel pad: $350,000
    Shipping and handling: $18,000
    Construction costs: $350,000
    Purchase of building: $95,000

    ANNUAL COSTS
    Heating oil (seasonal): 15,000L tank filled 4 times a year at $2.60 per L – $156,000
    Insurance: $4,000
    Electricity: $2,000
    Salaries: $65,000
    Materials (miscellaneous): $10,000
    Land lease (in kind contribution from LHC): $4,000
    15% added for “just in case crap happens”
    Municipal services ie; water, sewage, snow removal (might be in kind contribution NV Salluit): $5,000

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