We integrate living systems into corporate infrastructure to create measurable environmental impact and meaningful employee engagement.
Why Seedbreak Exists
Our Mission
Seedbreak provides regenerative infrastructure, employee education, and sustainability culture programming. We operate at the intersection of ESG implementation, workforce wellness, corporate land use optimization, and participatory sustainability. This is infrastructure, not landscaping.
Built from soil. Backed by Experience.
For over 15 years, I've been designing, building, and teaching food-growing systems in both corporate
and residential environments. What began as a passion for growing food evolved into a mission:
reconnect people, especially professionals, to living systems.
My work has always centered around two pillars: education and implementation. It's not just about
installing edible spaces or planting fruit trees. It's about creating systems that thrive long term and
teaching people how to steward them with confidence.
Over the years, I've had the privilege of working with organizations such as the Arizona Cardinals, St.
Vincent de Paul, private schools, and professional athletes, designing productive gardens that serve
both nutritional and community goals. I've transformed unused spaces, including an old parking lot,
into thriving food forests that now produce real food and real impact.
Before fully transitioning into regenerative agriculture, I spent years working inside the tech world
with companies like GoDaddy and iPower. That experience gave me something most growers don't
have: a deep understanding of corporate culture, infrastructure, and operational realities. I know how
businesses function and how to integrate food systems into them without disruption.
Today, through Seedbreak, I help corporate campuses, data centers, and organizations reimagine
their landscapes as productive ecosystems that support employee wellness, ESG and sustainability
goals, food production, education and engagement, and community connection.
Beyond installations, I've built an audience of over 25,000 followers through @tonygrowsfood and
have appeared more than a dozen times as FOX10 Phoenix's Garden Guy, helping bring regenerative
thinking into everyday conversations.
Seedbreak exists to bridge two worlds: modern corporate infrastructure and proven biological
systems. When done right, they don't compete. They strengthen one another.
Grow food. Grow people. Grow responsibility.
The vision
Over the past several years, I kept hearing the same narrative: data centers consume enormous amounts of power and water. The headlines focused on strain, impact, and scale. The picture being painted wasn't a good one.
Instead of seeing data centers as the problem, I began asking a different question: What if they could become part of the solution?
Before dedicating my life to regenerative agriculture, I spent years working inside the tech sector. I understand the operational intensity of digital infrastructure. I also understand the power of soil, food systems, and biological design.
What struck me is this: these campuses often have space. They have consistent energy output. They have thermal systems. They have teams working long hours in high-performance environments. What they often lack are living systems.
Seedbreak was built on the idea that food production and regenerative landscapes can be integrated directly into modern infrastructure. Raised garden beds, orchards, microgreen programs, and educational workshops are not aesthetic upgrades. They are strategic assets.
The public relations and ESG benefits are meaningful. A data center that grows food for employees or partners with local communities shifts the narrative. It demonstrates stewardship. It shows responsibility. It makes infrastructure human again.
Data centers generate steady streams of warm exhaust air. Rather than allowing that energy to dissipate, it can be stabilized and redirected to support greenhouse environments, using thermal regulation strategies to buffer temperature swings and extend growing seasons. Waste heat becomes productive heat. Energy becomes food.
This is not symbolic sustainability. It is systems thinking in practice.
Modern infrastructure does not have to stand apart from nature. It can participate in it.
We can grow food where data flows. We can cool systems with soil. We can transform perception through production.
Seedbreak exists to prove that even the most technical environments can support living ecosystems and that responsibility and innovation can grow side by side.
Credentials & Recognition
Corporate Clients
Society Of the St Vencent De Paul, Yeezy, Arizona Cardinals, WWE
15+ Years
On-site. In the dirt. From first sketch to final harvest.
FOX10 Phoenix Garden Guy.
A dozen-plus segments. Same message: grow food.
@tonygrowsfood
25K+ food-growing community


