A green roof is a roof of a building that is partially or completely covered with vegetation and soil, or a growing medium, planted over a waterproofing membrane. It may also include additional layers such as a root barrier and drainage and irrigation systems. Container gardens on roofs, where plants are maintained in pots, are not included in this discussion, as they are not considered true green roofs.
A green roof is often a key component of an autonomous building.
According to Green Roofs for Healthy Cities (a network of public and private interests founded by Steven W. Peck based in Toronto):
A 2005 study by Brad Bass of the University of Toronto showed that green roofs can also reduce heat loss and energy consumption in winter conditions.*
Many green roofs are installed to comply with local regulations and government fees, often regarding stormwater runoff management.Earth Pledge. Green Roofs : Ecological Design and Construction. Atglen, PA: Schiffer Pub., 2005. In areas with combined sewer-stormwater systems, heavy storms can overload the wastewater system and cause it to flood, dumping raw sewage into the local waterways. Green roofs decrease the total amount of runoff and slow down the rate of runoff flowing off the roof. It has been found that they can retain up to 75 percent of rainwater, gradually releasing it back into the atmosphere via condensation and transpiration, while retaining pollutants in their soil. * Elevation 314, a new development in Washington D.C., uses green roofs to filter and store some of its stormwater on site, avoiding the need for expensive underground sand filters to meet D.C. Department of Health stormwater regulations.
Combating the urban heat island effect another reason for creating a green roof. Traditional building materials soak up the sun's radiation and reflect it back as heat, making cities at least 7 degrees hotter than surrounding areas. *
Green roofs are becoming common in Chicago, as well as Atlanta, Portland, and other cities, where regulations to combat the urban heat island encourage their use. In the case of Chicago, the city has passed codes offering incentives to builders who put green roofs on their buildings. The Chicago City Hall green roof is one of the earliest and most well known examples of green roofs in the United States; it was planted as an experiment to determine the effects a green roof would have on the microclimate of the roof. Following that and other studies, it has now been estimated that if all the roofs in a major city were "greened," urban temperatures could be reduced by as much as 12 degrees. *
Green roofs have also been found to make dramatic improvements in a roof’s insulation value. A study conducted by Environment Canada found a 25 percent reduction in summer cooling needs, and a 26 percent in winter heat losses when a green roof is used. * In addition, greening a roof is expected to lengthen a roof’s lifespan by two or three times, according to Penn State University’s Green Roof Research Center * Finally, green roofs provide habitat for plants, insects and animals that otherwise have limited natural space in cities. Even in high-rise urban settings as tall as 19 stories high, it has been found that green roofs can attract beneficial insects, birds, bees and butterflies. Rooftop greenery complements wild areas by providing "stepping stones" for songbirds, migratory birds and other wildlife facing shortages of natural habitat. *
Another important distinction is between pitched green roofs and flat green roofs. Pitched green roofs are a traditional feature of many Scandinavian buildings and they tend to be of a simpler design than flat green roofs. This is because the pitch of the roof reduces the risk of water penetrating through the roof structure allowing fewer waterproofing and drainage layers to be used.
Switzerland has one of Europe's oldest green roofs, created in 1914 at the Moos lake water-treatment plant, Wallishofen, Zurich. Its filter-tanks have 30,000 square metres (320,000 ft²) of flat concrete roofs. To keep the interior cool and prevent bacterial growth in the filtration beds, a drainage layer of gravel and a 15 cm (6 in) layer of soil was spread over the roofs, which had been waterproofed with asphalt. A meadow developed from seeds already present in the soil; it is now a haven for many plant species, some of which are now otherwise extinct in the district, most notably 6,000 Orchis morio (green-winged orchid). More recent Swiss examples can be found at Klinikum 1 and Klinikum 2, the Cantonal Hospitals of Basel, and the Sihlpost platform at Zurich's main railway station.
What is believed to be the world's first green roof botanic garden was set up in Augustenborg, a suburb of Malmö, in May 1999. The International Green Roof Institute (IGRI) opened to the public in April 2001 as a research station and educational facility. (It has since been renamed the Scandinavian Green Roof Institute (SGRI), in view of the increasing number of similar organisations around the world.) Green roofs are well-established in Malmö the Augustenborg housing development near the IGRI botanic garden incorporates green roofs and extensive imaginative landscaping of streams, ponds and soakaways between the buildings to deal with storm water run-off. The new Bo01 urban residential development (in the Västra Hamnen (Western Harbour) close to the foot of the iconic Turning Torso office and apartment block, designed by Santiago Calatrava) is built on the site of old shipyards and industrial areas, and incorporates many green roofs.
British examples can be found at the University of Nottingham Library, and in London at the Horniman Museum and Canary Wharf. The Ethelred Estate, close to the River Thames in central London, is the British capital's largest roof-greening project to date. Toxteth in Liverpool is also a candidate for a major roof-greening project.
In France, a huge green roof of roughly 6,500 m² (70,000 ft²) has been incorporated into the new museum L'Historial de la Vendée which is due to open in 2006 at Les Lucs-sur-Boulogne.
A more advanced method used at some places in Egypt is farming fish next to the plants in a closed cycle. This allows the plants to benefit from the ammonia excreted by the fish, helping the plants to grow better and at the same time eliminating the need for changing the water for the fish, because the plants help to keep it clean by absorbing the ammonia. The fish also get some nutrients from the roots of the plants as well as oxygen.
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