Pimoroni Pico Breakout Garden Base
An easy, solderless, swappable way to use breakouts with your Raspberry Pi Pico – add up to six Pimoroni breakouts (4 x I2C and 2 x SPI) to the sturdy slots and get coding and creating!
Pico Breakout Garden Base sits underneath your Pico and lets you connect up to six of the extensive selection of Pimoroni breakouts to it. Whether it’s environmental sensors so you can keep track of the temperature and humidity in your office, a whole host of little screens for important notifications and readouts, and, of course, LEDs. Scroll down for a list of breakouts that are currently compatible with the C++/MicroPython libraries!
As well as a labeled landing area for your Pico, there’s also a full set of broken-out Pico connections, in case you need to attach even more sensors, wires, and circuitry. We’ve thrown in some rubber feet to keep the base nice and stable and to stop it from scratching your desk, or there are M2.5 mounting holes at the corners so that you can bolt it onto a solid surface if you prefer.
The six sturdy black slots are edge connectors that connect the breakouts to the pins on your Pico. There are two slots for SPI breakouts (like our 0.96” LCD Breakout or 1.12” SPI OLED Breakout) and four slots for I2C breakouts. Because I2C is a bus, you can use multiple I2C devices at the same time, providing they don’t have the same I2C address (we’ve made sure that all of our breakouts have different addresses, and we print them on the back of the breakouts so they’re easy to find).
As well as being a handy way to add functionality to your Pico, Breakout Garden is also very useful for prototyping projects without the need for complicated wiring, soldering, or breadboards, and you can grow or change up your setup at any time.
If you would prefer your breakout setup to be a little more compact, we have a three-slot Pico Breakout Garden Pack coming soon.
Please note that breakouts are sold separately! A Raspberry Pi Pico is not included – click here if you’d like to buy one.
Features
- Six sturdy edge-connector slots for Pimoroni breakouts
- 4x I2C slots (5 pins)
- 2x SPI slot (7 pins)
- Landing area with female headers for Raspberry Pi Pico
- 0.1” pitch, 5 or 7-pin connectors
- Broken-out pins
- Reverse polarity protection (built into breakouts)
- 99% assembled – just need to stick on the feet!
- Compatible with Raspberry Pi Pico/Pico W
- Schematic
About Pico Breakout Garden
Because of the way that I2C (the protocol that Breakout Garden uses) works, it doesn’t matter which slot on the Breakout Garden you plug your breakout into. Each I2C device has an address (you’ll see it on the back of each breakout) that it uses to identify itself to other I2C devices, so it’s effectively saying “Hey, it’s me, Bob!”
We’ve built reverse polarity protection into our Pimoroni breakouts, meaning that there’s no magic blue smoke if you accidentally plug one in the wrong way around. However, the correct way to plug them in is to make sure that the labels on the pins on your breakout and the labels on each Breakout Garden slot match up.
The markings on the base will show you which way round to plug in your Pico – just match up the USB port with the markings on the board.
Pico Breakout Compatibility
We’re in the process of writing C++ / MicroPython drivers for as many of our breakouts as possible – here’s a list of the breakouts that are currently supported. If you download the most recent version of our custom MicroPython uf2, it will have all these drivers included.
- 1.54″ SPI Colour Square LCD (240×240) Breakout
- 1.3″ SPI Colour Round LCD (240×240) Breakout
- 1.3″ SPI Colour Square LCD (240×240) Breakout
- 0.96″ SPI Colour LCD (160×80) Breakout
- LED Dot Matrix Breakout
- LTR-559 Light & Proximity Sensor Breakout
- 11×7 LED Matrix Breakout
- 5×5 RGB Matrix Breakout
- SGP30 Air Quality Sensor Breakout
- Trackball Breakout
- AS7262 6-channel Spectral Sensor (Spectrometer) Breakout
- RGB Encoder Breakout
- RGB Potentiometer Breakout
- IO Expander Breakout
- MICS6814 3-in-1 Gas Sensor Breakout (CO, NO2, NH3)
- MSA301 3DoF Motion Sensor Breakout
- RV3028 Real-Time Clock (RTC) Breakout
- BME680 Breakout – Temperature, Pressure, Humidity & Gas Sensor
- BME688 4-in-1 Air Quality Breakout (Gas, Temperature, Pressure, Humidity)
- BME280 Breakout – Temperature, Pressure, Humidity Sensor
- BMP280 Breakout – Temperature, Pressure and Altitude Sensor
- BH1745 – Luminance & Colour Sensor Breakout
- PMW3901 Optical Flow Sensor Breakout
- PAA5100JE Near Optical Flow SPI Breakout
If your breakout’s not yet on the list, you might find Pico-compatible drivers for it in CircuitPython!
Please note that Breakout Garden Base does not have I2C pull-up resistors. All of our breakouts have their pull-ups on board, but you may run into problems if you’re using CircuitPython and third-party breakouts that do not have their pull-ups.
Getting Started
The most straightforward way of getting started with Pico Breakout Garden Base is by installing our custom MicroPython build on your Pico – there’s a tutorial on how to get set up here.
You can find C examples here and MicroPython examples here.
About Raspberry Pi Pico
Raspberry Pi Pico is a flexible, low-cost microcontroller development board from the folks at Raspberry Pi, based on their very own chip – the RP2040. It’s easily programmable over USB with C/C++ or MicroPython, and ideal for use in all sorts of physical computing projects, devices, and inventions – we’re so excited to see what you make with it!
We’ve called our Pico-sized add-ons packs, as they’re designed to attach to the back of your Pico as if it were wearing a very stylish backpack (or a miniature jet pack, if you prefer). We’ve also got Pico bases (larger add-on boards with a space to mount your Pico on top) and some other boards that let you do interesting hacker things like using multiple packs at once – click here to view them all!
Your Pico will need to have male headers soldered to it (with the pins pointing downwards) to attach to our add-on boards.