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Fastest-growing US greenhouse lettuce brand with $100M+ retail sales; world's largest CEA leafy greens producer after 2025 Pennsylvania campus expansion; raised $300M from The Rise Fund; expanding with facilities in Texas, Georgia, and Pennsylvania.
Little Leaf Farms is a Devens, Massachusetts-based indoor greenhouse farming company founded in 2015 by Paul Sellew. The company grows baby lettuce, arugula, and salad greens in purpose-built greenhouse facilities that use hydroponic growing systems, natural sunlight supplemented by LED lighting, and closed-loop water recycling. Little Leaf Farms raised $300 million in capital in 2022 from The Rise Fund (TPG) and Bank of America.\n\nThe company broke $100 million in annual retail sales in 2023 and has continued rapid expansion, with major new facilities announced in Texas, Georgia, and Pennsylvania. In October 2025, Little Leaf Farms completed a major expansion of its Pennsylvania campus that made it the world's largest controlled environment agriculture (CEA) leafy greens producer by square footage. New facilities in Tennessee were also announced in 2025, creating hundreds of jobs and investing approximately $75 million.\n\nUnlike high-tech vertical farming startups that struggled with energy costs, Little Leaf Farms' greenhouse model leverages natural sunlight, which dramatically reduces electricity consumption. This structural cost advantage, combined with disciplined geographic expansion targeting high-density markets, has allowed the company to scale profitably while competitors collapsed.
Secured Series B funding in May 2025 from Khosla Ventures and Yanmar Ventures to deploy Robotics Foundation Models for autonomous strawberry harvesting and pruning, targeting an 80% reduction in greenhouse labor costs.
Zordi combines low-cost modular greenhouses with AI-powered robots trained on Robotics Foundation Models (RFMs) to perform delicate, dexterous agricultural tasks — including strawberry picking, scouting, and plant pruning — that have historically resisted automation. The New Jersey-based company's approach dramatically reduces labor requirements while improving crop quality consistency, and it is scaling from its first greenhouse deployment to broader commercial rollout. Backed by Khosla Ventures and Yanmar Ventures, Zordi applies foundation model techniques to agricultural robotics.
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