On the site there is a small hill, on the slope of which a huge solar panel has been installed. The output capacity of this solar panel is 2 megawatts (2,000 kilowatts). A solar panel placed on the roof of an ordinary house has an output of 2–4 kilowatts, so the amount of electricity generated by this solar panel at Kurkku Fields is the equivalent of about 500– 1,000 times this amount.
The tap water used at Kurkku Fields is drawn from wells, and the miscellaneous water emitted by facilities on the site goes to a purifying tank below the Dining eating area, where it is decomposed by bacteria power. It then passes through a water purifying system called the biogeofilter, which conducts filtering using the power of plants, such as willows and watercress, and microbes with high nutrient absorbability, before flowing into Mother Pond, which is situated at the lowest point in the center of the site. This water purifying system does not use any chemical agents, and Kurkku Fields does not have any public water supply and sewer services.
The water that collects in Mother Pond is pumped up using solar-generated power and supplied to facilities on the site. Since the water quality is so good, the artificial stream on the site and the biotopes, which are inhabited by plants and creatures, are the home of killifish, freshwater loaches, diving beetles, and so on.