Land was barren. He dug 10-acre underground village and orchard
He spent 40 years excavating ten acres of rooms, tunnels, a chapel, an underground aquarium, and courtyards to experiment with underground farming.
With no budget, working as a farmhand by day, he mixed mortar from the dirt he dug out, creating his own concrete and bricks.
Despite continuing to work as a day laborer during the day (mostly digging irrigation ditches), by the 1920s, he had completed about 50 subterranean rooms.
An immigrant in Fresno, California, Forestiere had planned to farm citrus until discovering that his 80 acres of “hardpan” soil were unusable for planting.
Digging as far as 25 feet below the surface, Forestiere reached depths where the soil was good, and his trees were protected from Fresno’s extreme summer heat and winter frosts.
After about 20 years of digging and underground farming, he could quit his day job and live off the fruits of his subterranean orchards.
Despite having just a fourth-grade education and no architectural training, Forestiere -- inspired by the catacombs of Rome -- built arches for support, and to this day, none of his underground construction has collapsed.
In areas where he wanted more natural cooling (like near stoves), he created cone-shaped openings to encourage the venturi effect, pushing the hot air out and sucking cooler air down.
His underground home had a kitchen with a wood-burning stove, an ice box, and a dining room, winter and summer bedrooms, many skylights, a subterranean fishpond, a car garage for guests, and a three-floor aquarium with an underground glass viewing area.
He had plans to open an underground resort to the public as a place to cool off in the summer, but he died before it was completed.
His brother and family took over the site, and today it’s open to the public.
- Forestiere Underground Gardens: undergroundgardens.com
- On *faircompanies: faircompanies.com/videos/land...
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