top of page
Agri-Tech & Horticulture

10 September 2024

Marks & Spencer Visits UK's First Glasshouse Centre of Excellence in Hadlow

Marks & Spencer recently visited the UK's first Centre of Excellence in glasshouse growing, based at Hadlow College, to observe the range of tomatoes being cultivated.

The Thanet Earth Centre of Excellence @ Hadlow College, which officially opened in June 2024, aims to inspire and train the next generation of UK salad and vegetable growers.

Using Hadlow College's state-of-the-art glasshouse, horticultural students benefit from working directly with Thanet Earth, the UK's largest glasshouse salad supplier, to develop their skills and grow tomatoes in a commercial crop environment.

Jane Phillips, Senior Agronomist for Salads at Marks & Spencer, visited the site to sample some of the many tomato varieties and discuss ways to supply the newest and best tomato varieties to the supermarket.

A photograph of several varieties of tomato, including a range of colours and sizes.

Alan Harvey, Head of Horticulture at Hadlow College, said: "We consider ourselves very fortunate at Hadlow to be able to host such visits in our Centre of Excellence and would like to thank both Thanet Earth and Marks & Spencer for their time and contribution. We are about to start the new academic year and will be training students in these fantastic facilities. We hope our Horticultural degree students will be designing and running projects in the Centre of Excellence."

The Thanet Earth Centre of Excellence @ Hadlow College is a groundbreaking partnership between Hadlow College, leading industry grower Thanet Earth, and research and innovation organisation Growing Kent & Medway.

The facility plays an integral part in horticulture courses at the College and features cutting-edge technology, including:

  • Suspended gutters running hydroponics for tomatoes
  • LED and high-pressure sodium lighting
  • A vertical growing farm
  • Latest environmental control computers – PRIVA
  • Propagation unit using mist and sensors
  • Dedicated space for individual glasshouse research
  • Outdoor standing down beds for shrub and herbaceous plant production
  • New structures for seasonal bedding plant production

Students work alongside practitioners from Thanet Earth to develop their skills and produce hydroponic tomatoes.

To find out more about the Thanet Earth Centre of Excellence @ Hadlow College, visit the Projects Page on the Hadlow College website.

See it Differently

Related Links

Gallery

Related Articles

Continue your exploration of this topic with these related news articles.

How Growing Green Helps Growers Thrive

Robert Mitchell Farms, located near Sevenoaks, is a specialist producer of Bramley apples supplying supermarkets and the processed food industry. In 2022, they applied for a sustainability grant from Growing Green to replace an old...

Agri-Tech & Horticulture

7 min read

Below-ground listening devices monitor biodiversity in vineyard trials

A new research project funded by Growing Kent & Medway to increase carbon and increase biodiversity in UK vineyards will use cutting-edge technology to monitor the impact of its trials. Led by Niab, the research project will see...

Agri-Tech & Horticulture

4 min read

Turning dust into gold: finding value in cherry and seaweed waste

Innovative products made from agricultural waste materials are being tested for their benefits to human and crop health, in new research projects we are funding. Scientists at the University of Kent are working with companies to...

Agri-Tech & Horticulture

3 min read

bottom of page