Hoop House Plans: Site a Hoop House for Success

With the right research and construction choices, a hoop house can provide your crops with sturdy protection and a longer growing season.

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by AdobeStock/Veronika

With some key considerations on hoop house plans, siting and building a hoop house can provide your crops with sturdy protection and a longer growing season.

Hoop houses (also known as “high tunnels”) are plastic-covered hooped frames tall enough to walk under that are used to extend the growing seasons of vegetables, flowers, and fruit. They’re also called “unheated greenhouses,” “polytunnels,” and “cold frames.” They can be used for year-round growing of seasonal crops, and although temperatures inside aren’t much higher than outdoors when the sun isn’t shining, hoop houses manage to facilitate impressive rates of growth and quality crops. Generally, hoop houses have no supplemental heating, and crops are grown directly in the ground. Hoop houses are often double-skinned, meaning they have two layers of plastic film, with a small blower keeping the space between the layers inflated. This provides increased insulation and improved strength against winds and snow or ice loads, and lengthens the life of the plastic by preventing flapping and abrasion. Provided winds aren’t strong, overnight winter temperatures in a double-layered hoop house can be about 8 degrees Fahrenheit higher than outside. Hoop house soil temperature rarely falls below 50 degrees in Zone 7a.

If you want to establish a hoop house of your own, here are some factors to consider before you invest in the time and effort, and ultimate reward, of having one.

Hoop House Plans

Siting

  • Updated on Apr 24, 2024
  • Originally Published on Jan 12, 2021
Tagged with: cold frame, garden, gardening, greenhouse, hoop, hoophouse, organic, polyethylene, polytunnel
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