Would you believe it’s possible to grow 60,000lbs of organic fruits and veggies per acre? According to Urbanhomestead.org they can produce approximately 3 tons of food annually (2009) on only 1/10 of an acre in their urban yard. If conditions are ideal, scaling this method up could result in a tremendous amount of food per acre.
The Urban Homestead model at a Glance
Location: Northwest Pasadena, one mile from downtown Pasadena [California]
Property Size: 66’ x 132’ = 8,712 sq.ft. (1/5 acre)
House: Simple, wood frame craftsman bungalow. Circa 1917.
House Size: 1,500 sq. ft.
Garden Size: ~ 1/10 acre (3,900 sq.ft. / ~ 66′ x 66′)
Garden Diversity: Over 350 different vegetables, herbs, fruits & berries
Productivity: Up to 6,000 lbs harvest annually on 1/10 acre
SOURCE: http://urbanhomestead.org/urban-homestead

The back yard at the Urban Homestead
Let’s think about this model on a larger scale. Scaling this up could, in theory, produce 60,000 lbs of food annually on just 1 acre of land.
The average American family of 4 consumes about 4 tons (8000 lbs) of food annually. 1 acre of land (208ft X 208ft) farmed like this and scaled up, could (theoretically) support 7.5 families – 30 men, women, and children for a full year!
There are 43,560 square feet per acre of land. If you’re capable of producing 60,000lbs of food, that equates to almost 1.4 pounds of organic food per square foot!
Numbers don’t lie. And this is a real-world application with the proof it works.
Let’s take this up a notch.
Of course, you’d have to buy another acre of land to build your house on, but technically that would be enough space to build one HUGE 43,560sqft home. That’s big enough to allow 20-30 people to live very comfortably. But that’s not very realistic now is it?

On that second acre of land, you could technically build eight 2560sqft Shipping Container Homes, each sitting on 1/8 of an acre 5445sqft (approximately a 73.79ft x 73.79ft square).
That’s a nice chunk of land and lots of square footage in excess of the 1280sqft footprint of each home. Each home has a footprint of 40ft x 32ft.
That leaves about 4165sqft of land around each home, or a strip of land 17ft deep in the front and rear of the building and a 21ft wide strip of land on either side of the home (42ft between homes).
Even with 8 homes on the extra 1 acre of land, that leaves a whopping 33,320sqft of land to grow more food on. This is enough empty land to produce an ADDITIONAL 45,981lbs of organic fruits and veggies.

Including the original 60,000lbs of food produced on the first acre, that’s a grand total of 105,981lbs of organic fruits and veggies produced on 2 acres of land with 8 homes, capable of supporting at least 8 families of 4 people each, comfortably for a FULL YEAR, with food left over to preserve and/or sell to generate income.
Of course, this is taking things to the extreme. You may not have enough room to walk in the yards, but you can sure feed a whole bunch of people for a year and make some money to boot.

Also, we need to take climate into consideration. The folks at Urban Homestead live in Pasadena, California. The climate there allows them to grow food pretty much year-round, whereas many parts of the country might only get a good 3 months of the growing season (without greenhouses) before the snow flies. Still, this is an inspiring example for those seeking food freedom!