Green Roofs
One aspect of green architecture is Green roofs or rooftop gardens. It can
incorporate the use of green materials, such as recycled goods, sustainable
resources, or materials that impact our home Earth less during production.
Green architecture is only as green as the engineer envisions - she can incorporate
sustainable ingredients (as an example to others as well) or go the easy route
and use readily available en-masse materials which we can presently afford, but
that will ultimately create an unfortunate circumstance for the world at large.
Green roofing is done by creating permeable and impermeable layers on a relatively
flat roof (although not always). Plants are integrated onto this series of layers on the roof.
And up, into the blue. The Green roof technology has been around for
hundreds of years in Europe, and there are beautiful examples of it from all over
Earth. We are beginning to use it here in the USA, funded through the EPA
(Environmental Protection Agency, federal and state levels) in the large-scale
buildings, and on the small scale it is being done privately.
The Technology
In order for a rooftop garden to work, there are two important requirements
that must be met. One, the roof must be impermeable to the inside of the building.
And two, the structure of the building must be as such that the roof does not
impose excess weight upon it.
Green roofs are built in layers upon buildings that can withstand the weight.
The bottom layer is made of an impermeable substrate that is strong enough to
withstand years of root intrusion and water impact. The next layer is a layer
of substance that lets water through, but not rocks. The next layer is a very
permeable layer, like rocks or something like them, that allows the water to
filter through. Next, some companies put a fine layer of mesh under. This is
the soil layer. And finally, the plants are planted. For more information on the
composition of a green roof, visit these sites.
Social Design Notes - Green Roofs
Penn State Green Roof Research Center
Benefits
There are a number of important benefits attributed to Green roofs:
- Significant reduction in water runoff and pollution when compared with
conventional roofs. Thus, urban stormwater runoff is lowered significantly, a
problem which is pervasive throughout American cities. As seen from the sky,
during the first rain of the season, a huge belch of black pollution flows down
the stormdrains and into the bays. A major source of this pollution is the
slick roof tops in cities that hold pollution-filled dirt -- up until the day
that it rains, at which point the filth travels down the street and into our
natural surroundings, creeks rivers and oceans.
- Preserve biodiversity and natural habitat for birds and beneficial insects
in an urban atmosphere
- Protect the roof from severe weather such as UV sunrays and hail.
These roofs can last over 50 years - most roofs must be reroofed every 15-30
years, and reroofing is a costly procedure.
- Minimize water damage and maintenance costs
- Increase water percolation back into soil rather than letting water be taken
into rivers, bays and oceans where we cannot use it. Water is becoming a very
precious resource, one which we are quickly depleting out of the water tables
below us. Each winter it rains, but only so much returns to the water table.
Be decreasing sheeting of water and allowing it to percolate back into the soil,
green roofs increase the life span of our water tables. Another way of doing this
in cities is through managed wetlands and water reuse. Over the last century we
have done away with many of our Bay Area natural wetlands by paving over them.
By carefully managing our water, we will extend the lifespans of our water tables,
reducing the necessity for costly and pollutive methods of water extraction such
as desalinization plants.
- Act as a natural insulator, which reduces energy consumption and heating /
cooling costs. They also absorb noise pollution and sunlight, rather than reflect
them.
- Absorb air pollution and acid rain
- Reducing the urban heat island effect (heat waves). It has been found that
large cities are on average about 10 degrees hotter than the surrounding area.
This affects local climate and rainfall.
Political, Economic, and Social Support
So, is anyone doing green roofing? How would one go about funding it? What
companies are involved?
Luckily, there is quite a bit of support for green roofing in the world, and it
is on the upward incline. There are several companies in the business,
universities studying it, and people who want it to happen.
Roofmeadow.com
A German Green Roof Company
Green Roof Examples
From modern green roofs, such as the thousands in Germany and Hundertwasser's
ecological building creations, to ancient green roofs such as the Hanging Gardens
of Babylon (one of the Seven Wonders of the World) constructed around 500 B.C.,
green roofs dot our world with their magnificence. In the following list of pages
you will see examples of their beauty and logic.
A Hundertwasser Page
William McDonough's Site
Trees on the Pentagon Building's Roof
|