Roman Empire Before the development of greenhouses, agricultural practices were constrained to weather conditions. According to the climatic zone of communities, people were limited to a select range of species and time of the year in which they could grow plants. Yet around 30 CE, the Roman Empire built the first recorded attempt of an artificial environment. Due to emperor
Tiberius's declining health, the royal physicians recommended that the emperor eat one cucumber a day.
15th-century Korea The next biggest breakthrough in greenhouse design came from Korea in the 15th century during the
Joseon dynasty. In the 1450s, Soon ui Jeon described the first artificially heated greenhouse in his manuscript called
Sangayorok.
17th century The concept of greenhouses also appeared in the
Netherlands and then
England in the 17th century, along with the plants. Some of these early attempts required enormous amounts of work to close up at night or to winterize. There were serious problems with providing adequate and balanced heat in these early greenhouses. The first 'stove' (heated) greenhouse in the UK was completed at
Chelsea Physic Garden by 1681. Today, the
Netherlands has many of the largest greenhouses in the world, some of them so vast that they are able to produce millions of vegetables every year. at the
Palace of Versailles, France. Experimentation with greenhouse design continued during the 17th century in Europe, as technology produced better glass and construction techniques improved. The greenhouse at the
Palace of Versailles was an example of their size and elaborateness; it was more than long, wide, and high.
18th century Andrew Faneuil, a prosperous Boston merchant, built the first American greenhouse in 1737. When returning to
Mount Vernon after the war,
George Washington learned of the greenhouse built at the Carroll estate of
Mount Clare (Maryland). It was designed by Margaret Tilghman Carroll, an industrious gardener who cultivated citrus trees in this orangery. In 1784 Washington wrote requesting details about the design of her greenhouse, and she complied. Washington wrote:
19th century The French botanist
Charles Lucien Bonaparte is often credited with building the first practical modern greenhouse in
Leiden, Holland, during the 1800s to grow medicinal tropical plants. Originally only on the estates of the rich, the growth of the science of
botany caused greenhouses to spread to the universities. The French called their first greenhouses
orangeries, since they were used to protect orange trees from freezing. As pineapples became popular,
pineries, or
pineapple pits, were built.
19th-century England ,
Brussels, Belgium, an example of 19th-century greenhouse architecture The largest glasshouses yet conceived were constructed in England during the Victorian era. As a direct result of colonial expansion, the purpose of glasshouses changed from agriculture to horticulture. The accelerated transfer of plants and horticultural knowledge between colonies contributed to the Victorian fascination with 'exotic' plants and environments. Glasshouses became spectacles to entertain the general public. The curated environments in glasshouses aimed to capture "the Western imagination of an idealised landscape" and support the fantasy of the cultural 'other'. A prominent design from the 19th century were glasshouses with sufficient height for sizeable trees, called
palm houses. These were normally in public gardens or parks and exemplified the 19th-century development of glass and iron architecture. This technology was widely used in railway stations, markets, exhibition halls, and other large buildings that needed large, open internal area. One of the earliest examples of a palm house is in the
Belfast Botanic Gardens. Designed by
Charles Lanyon, the building was completed in 1840. It was constructed by iron-maker
Richard Turner, who would later build the
Palm House, Kew Gardens at the
Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, London, in 1848. This came shortly after the
Chatsworth Great Conservatory (1837–40) and shortly before
The Crystal Palace (1851), both designed by
Joseph Paxton, and both now lost. s reached to the ceiling in a greenhouse in
Richfield, Minnesota, where market gardeners grew a wide variety of produce for sale in
Minneapolis, Other large greenhouses built in the 19th century included the
New York Crystal Palace,
Munich's
Glaspalast and the
Royal Greenhouses of Laeken (1874–1895) for
King Leopold II of Belgium. In Japan, the first greenhouse was built in 1880 by
Samuel Cocking, a British merchant who exported
herbs.
20th century , in
Cornwall, England , the
Netherlands In the 20th century, the
geodesic dome was added to the many types of greenhouses. Notable examples are the
Eden Project in
Cornwall,
The Rodale Institute in Pennsylvania, the
Climatron at the
Missouri Botanical Garden in St. Louis, Missouri, and
Toyota Motor Manufacturing Kentucky. The pyramid is another popular shape for large, high greenhouses; there are several pyramidal greenhouses at the
Muttart Conservatory in
Alberta (). Greenhouse structures adapted in the 1960s when wider sheets of
polyethylene (polythene) film became widely available.
Hoop houses were made by several companies and were also frequently made by the growers themselves. Constructed of aluminum extrusions, special galvanized steel tubing, or even just lengths of steel or PVC water pipe, construction costs were greatly reduced. This resulted in many more greenhouses being constructed on smaller farms and garden centers. Polyethylene film durability increased greatly when more effective UV-inhibitors were developed and added in the 1970s; these extended the usable life of the film from one or two years up to three and eventually four or more years. Gutter-connected greenhouses became more prevalent in the 1980s and 1990s. These greenhouses have two or more bays connected by a common wall, or row of support posts. Heating inputs were reduced as the ratio of floor area to exterior wall area was increased substantially. Gutter-connected greenhouses are now commonly used both in production and in situations where plants are grown and sold to the public as well. Gutter-connected greenhouses are commonly covered with structured polycarbonate materials, or a double layer of polyethylene film with air blown between to provide increased heating efficiencies. == Theory of operation ==