Lightbulb "green"house by LinuxH4x0r
Contest WinnerFeatured
IMG_9055.JPG
The incandescent light bulb is the ultimate symbol of wasted energy. Since I don't use them anymore I wanted to transform them into something green instead of throwing them away.
This project was inspired by an ad I saw in the June 08 edition of Popular Science.

WARNING:
THIS INSTRUCTABLE REQUIRES THE USE OF DANGEROUS TOOLS AND SHARP GLASS. I ACCEPT NO LIABILITY FOR ANYTHING!
 
Remove these adsRemove these ads by Signing Up

Step 1: Materials

IMG_9047.JPG
I used:

-An old lightbulb. Best if burned out, but if its going to just sit and collect dust thats fine too.

-Epoxy. Best glue ever!

-7/16" socket. Holds the bulb on

-Some rubber part from my bike.

-Thing that goes between shower head and tiles

-Small plastic cup

-Soil



Tools:

-Pliers

-File

-Compressor

-Drill, drill bit
1-40 of 316Next »
unshaven joe says: Apr 18, 2010. 5:14 PM
When I made mine, I accidentally broke the little glass tube, and it shot off into the depths of my garage.
awesomecreations says: Feb 1, 2013. 10:11 AM
I also just attempted to break the middle-glass out of an old bulb but the bottom of the bulb also cracked.
Kawthar Xoubi says: Sep 27, 2012. 4:27 AM
this is amazing...would definately try to make this <3
Fried Potatoes says: Jun 23, 2012. 8:14 AM
I love this!
dr-awkward says: Jun 11, 2008. 12:55 AM
radical idea. i made a fancied up version and had fun makin it for the GF

heres a link to the other few photos:
http://flickr.com/photos/27366084@N07/sets/72157605548571428/
CIMG0017.JPGCIMG0029.JPG
daddy1529 says: Mar 28, 2012. 5:39 PM
Wicked Awesome!!!!
manimpz says: Dec 28, 2009. 6:57 PM
Pretty Steampunk. I want one of those!
Peanut123 says: Nov 27, 2009. 12:22 PM
 that is an awesome greenhouse! make an instructables
ogama8 says: Nov 18, 2009. 3:13 PM
WOW!!! Nice job on the steampunk look!
diazsinger says: Apr 8, 2009. 3:52 PM
Wow that is very cool looking... Reminds me of something you'd find in an old antique store.
dutchypoodle says: Sep 11, 2008. 4:19 PM
I'm sure she was pleased as punch to accept such a one-of-a-kind gift! This plant's got STYLE. LinuxH4x0R, it's a bright green idea. Certainly made me smile, anyway.
LinuxH4x0r (author) says: Sep 11, 2008. 4:27 PM
Thanks!
Labot2001 says: Jun 28, 2008. 5:42 PM
Kinda steampunk.
LinuxH4x0r (author) says: Jun 26, 2008. 6:27 PM
Looks great! (sorry I took so long to reply I was at my other house in MN without internet)
UQONYX says: Jul 12, 2011. 7:02 PM
I cant open up the lightbulb. ANY helP?????
willosac says: Jul 26, 2008. 3:48 AM
I have put a stamp with your name on the bottom... I live In South Africa and many of our poor settlements have been badly eroded where people live in informal settlements! I'm talking not a blade of grass for many square kilometers at a time... They are in dire need of the land to be secured so that storms do not wash it away!!! They also need the beauty of nature as cliche as that may sound... So iv got a team together we are making these bulbs and then selling them at markets to buy trees from nurserys at cost prize and once a month go and plant 50 or so trees in these settlements. Its a small drop in the ocean but every little bit counts. We give community leaders responsibility for these trees and do routine checkups to make sure they are thriving!!! So ya thats it mate.. Ant
DrDontDoDis says: May 17, 2011. 10:03 AM
I know this is a little late to reply, but you should do some research on soil conservation and the response to the 'Dust Bowl' storms that hit the US in the '30's.

I don't know the details of your climate, but the trees you plant should be a) hardy in your climate, b) have a large cross-section to break the wind and any dust storms (evergreens are great), and c) be fast growing.

It sounds like you're all but in a desert. Erosion control techniques should be put into action immediately, farmers should use appropriate cover crops, and crop rotation will be essential when things have stabilized. Soil organisms of all kinds should also be promoted. Fertilization with compost, kitchen scraps and manure will also help greatly.

Nature is designed to be cyclical and to seek a balance. Replacing what you have taken with your natural by-products will complete the system and bring about great improvements.
LinuxH4x0r (author) says: Jul 26, 2008. 8:01 AM
Wow, sounds like a good cause! If you want a good try to grow quickly in a dry climate try Chineese Elm. We had one and it grew to 5 or 6 meters in just 5 years! I'd love to see some pictures of the project and of the settlements if you have access to a camera.
porcupinemamma says: May 14, 2011. 9:16 PM
Brilliant- I don't have a drill press, any idea what tool i could substitute?
Also, any idea where i could purchase the light bulbs? there don't seem to be anymore available around where I live.
kenverzets says: Mar 16, 2011. 12:55 PM
im a problem qhat is please
tidje says: Nov 20, 2009. 11:50 PM
I just wanted to make a comment for those people who think the plant needs air holes.  I have made several stained glass terrariums that use this same principle.  If you give the plants an airtight house, you create a mini ecosystem and the water that's inside will eventually evaporate to the top, condensate on the glass, and fall back down like rain.  It will keep doing that over and over, and you end up hardly ever having to water (and when you do, I guess you get some new air in).  I have one going that I started years ago.  I water every couple of months because it's not completely airtight and eventually some water does escape by evaporation.  A few plants have died (some work better than others in these situations- and I've also let it get a bit too dry at times- completely forgetting about it since you normally don't have to water it).  I still have a couple of the original plants, though...
Maybe this calls for an instructable.  I've never made one. :)
 
laxap says: Nov 28, 2009. 12:38 PM
Thanks for this interesting info.

Do the plant grow, and does it stop growing ? How does it get CO2 (does it actually need any) ?
tidje says: Nov 29, 2009. 7:26 AM
The plants don't really grow much- a little bit, but they have stayed small enough to not outgrow the terrarium.  A few of the little fern babies have doubled or tripled in size over the course of many months, but they were very tiny to begin with.   Of course I used small plants purposely to try to prevent them from growing too much.  They also usually recommend that you don't use fertilizer on plants in a terrarium.  I think that is mostly for the same reason- so that it doesn't outgrow its enclosed environment.
As for the CO2- I don't really know why it isn't a problem.  Maybe the little (tiny) bit of air that might get in where the dome attaches to the base is enough...
I suspect, though, that maybe it's just that the plants don't need that much nor do they really use up as much as we might be imagining.  I think we think of it in a way that we compare it to a person that needs O2 and gives off CO2, and quickly runs out of O2 in a small, enclosed environment.  My guess (and it is only that- a guess) is that their use of CO2, giving off O2, isn't quite the same.  The plants likely don't use as much nor need as much CO2 as we need O2.  on the other hand, maybe my dome is big enough in comparison to the size of the plants to not cause a problem.
Anyone with more knowledge on the subject can feel free to comment and correct me if I'm wrong.  :)   
As long as I'm writing, I'd also like to comment that plants that like a high, constant humidity work best in a terrarium because the terrarium maintains a high humidity in the air.  Ferns have worked well for me... and they usually don't recommend cacti and succulents. 
 
day-veed says: Oct 20, 2010. 9:08 AM
Plants respire and take in O2 ALL day long and give of CO2 (Even when photosynthesising). However, in the presence of sunlight, plants will take in CO2 to photosythesise. They use Sunlight to 'combine' water and C02 to make sugar and give off O2 as a by-product. Thus, the 'stock' of O2 gets replenished while the amount of CO2 is regulated. I hope this was of some help!
ddentrem says: Jan 15, 2011. 7:59 PM
exactly so. Plants have to respire just like animals! People often forget that. Since they make much more oxygen than they use, the whole thing usually gets simplified to "plants generate oxygen"
Fojar says: Jan 7, 2010. 4:57 PM
Plants do convert CO2 into O2 during photosynthesis.  The light energy gets stored into sugar.  To get it back out, the plant then respires just like animals, turning the O2 back into CO2.  That's why the plants can live with very little air exchange with the outside world.
afroray says: Jan 9, 2011. 3:04 AM
what plant should i use to grow in the light bulb i dont know much about plants any help?
mitra_dios says: Nov 10, 2010. 5:25 AM
very nice
KojiHatada says: Aug 17, 2010. 8:57 AM
That's very beautiful design ! I think plants in light bulbs give new ideas.
isaactwidale says: Apr 6, 2010. 1:57 PM
u can actually just fill the lightbulb with salt then swish it around to get rid off the white stuff :P
astrong0 says: Mar 22, 2010. 8:14 PM
.....now i was thinking.... what happens when the mint out grows the container thing or you have to air the plant out so it can live?
Danny09 says: Sep 25, 2009. 10:34 PM
Whats the: -Some rubber part from my bike. and the -Thing that goes between shower head and tiles supposed to be?
dagenius says: Nov 7, 2009. 7:02 PM

Yes, I know, I would have prefered if the writer of the instructable were more descriptive in this. I think that the point is to encourage people to not realy make something exactly the same, but to make it their own.

So I guess you can just use stuff laying around.

Danny09 says: Mar 20, 2010. 11:10 AM
if you check out the best of instructables vol 1 book it makes more sense the shower thing is called a shower flange and for the rubber part im still not sure

tizart7 says: Feb 4, 2010. 4:46 PM
Good job !!!
CraftyEmoChick says: Dec 22, 2009. 1:02 PM
what do you do if the plant gets too big for the light bulb? can you just leave it or do you have to replant it?
lucir_bv says: Dec 21, 2009. 6:50 AM
Hi! Where is your bike? i need some rubber parts. Can i take any rubber parts?
OceanLady says: Dec 7, 2009. 3:59 PM
I want one! They look awesome... I actually did a photoshop thing for a "be green" poster in high school with the same concept. I'll have to bookmark this and come back to it if I ever find myself at my parents' house without my kid... newborns and breaking glass don't mix very well, lol
panni says: Dec 5, 2009. 5:46 PM
it`s great!!! but i am going to do for my science proyec??? what exactly  i need to know ?? pleaseee!!!
Evilthingamabober says: Nov 25, 2009. 6:33 PM
Nice, now just make a lightbulb biosphere!
1-40 of 316Next »
Pro

Get More Out of Instructables

Already have an Account?

close

PDF Downloads
As a Pro member, you will gain access to download any Instructable in the PDF format. You also have the ability to customize your PDF download.

Upgrade to Pro today!