About Agrith
A practical system of inventors, builders, and operators working on food resilience through smart forest prototypes and measured field development.
Who We Are
Agrith is a practical innovation system for inventors, builders, and operators who want to improve food resilience in desert environments.
The work began as agriculture research connected to Hani.solutions, but it has grown into something wider: a smart forest model that combines food production, animal systems, cooling, water management, tree biomass, research, and real operating data.
Our focus is not only to design a beautiful green project. The goal is to build a working ecosystem that can be measured, improved, and eventually scaled.
Why We Started
The COVID period made one problem very clear: food security cannot depend only on external supply chains. When a country or region still relies heavily on food and feed from outside, every global disruption becomes a local risk.
That realization pushed us deeper into research and development. We began asking practical questions:
- Can food, feed, shade, cooling, and waste conversion work together as one system?
- Can animal production become healthier and less expensive when fresh biomass is produced on site?
- Can desert land become productive without ignoring water, heat, soil, and operating cost?
- Can a forest model become a platform for food, education, research, tourism, and long-term resilience?
Agrith is our answer to those questions.
What We Are Building
We are building a smart forest prototype program before moving into the larger forest implementation phase. The current system is based on six connected project tracks:
- Smart forest prototype program: the parent model that connects all pilots into one operating ecosystem.
- Subsurface ventilation and superadobe animal rooms: cooler animal spaces using earth temperature, airflow, and practical passive-cooling logic.
- Quail farming: a controlled meat and egg production pilot for nutrition, housing, health, and feed testing.
- Black soldier fly larvae: organic waste conversion into high-protein biomass and useful soil inputs.
- Marine seabass farming: controlled aquaculture to study water quality, filtration, feed, and production risk.
- Livestock, native poultry, and living shade: goats, sheep, native chicken, and climbing-plant shade structures tested as one field system.
These projects are separate enough to measure clearly, but connected enough to show how the future forest can operate.
Our Method
Agrith is built around prototype-first development. For the last two years, we have been testing ideas through small systems instead of jumping directly into a large project.
This method keeps the work grounded:
- Build a small working version.
- Measure cost, feed, water, survival, growth, heat, and maintenance.
- Improve the design from field data.
- Connect the best systems into circular loops.
- Prepare the model for investors, partners, or government-level implementation.
The next stage is to complete the current prototype work, document the results, and move toward the execution phase of the larger smart forest.
The Forest Logic
The forest is not only a landscape element. It is the production base.
Trees, especially Moringa and other resilient species, can provide shade, biomass, microclimate improvement, animal feed support, soil benefits, and a more stable environment for underplanting. Animal systems, aquaculture, insects, compost, and cooling infrastructure can then operate around that living base.
This is why Agrith is designed as an ecosystem, not a single farm product.
What We Want To Prove
Agrith should prove that a desert site can become productive, educational, and economically meaningful while also improving the local environment.
The model should help answer whether we can:
- reduce food and feed dependency through local production;
- lower animal heat stress with better housing and cooling logic;
- use organic waste as a resource instead of a problem;
- grow tree biomass in parallel with animal and food systems;
- create a repeatable model for future smart forest parks;
- support research, education, tourism, and sustainable jobs.
Documentation
The Projects section is our working journal. It will document prototypes, lessons, failures, improvements, reports, organizational updates, and new work connected to Agrith.
The website should stay close to the real project: what we are building, what we are learning, and what is ready to move forward.
Ready to Discuss the Next Phase?
We are moving from prototype development toward a larger execution phase, with practical data, focused collaboration, and a clear food resilience direction.