Vertical gardens save space, create privacy, reduce dust,
remove air pollutants, insulate against temperature extremes and noise and
enhance biodiversity. Not bad for a style of planting that’s been popular for
centuries.
From the hanging gardens of Babylon to ivy covered university
halls, we have long enjoyed growing plants on walls and fences. The practical
and aesthetic benefits are many, encouraging both individual gardeners and
eco-aware architects to create new incarnations of the vertical garden.
Vertical gardens can range from a simple “wall” of hanging plants used to
provide shade, privacy and visual pleasure in a backyard or on an apartment
balcony, to an elaborate perpendicular hydroponic system designed to purify the
air and provide a natural interface for occupants of a large commercial
building.
Growing vertically maximizes the use of space in tight locations, improves
ambient air quality, provides a unique visual element and/or privacy and reduces
thermal loading of sun-lit walls during summer. More sophisticated vertical
gardens can, when connected to rain barrels or cisterns, help purify rain or
grey water. As well as saving water, they can save maintenance time when all the
plants are watered simultaneously and/or automatically.
In a presentation earlier this year to the Greening Rooftops for Sustainable
Communities Conference in Boston, Massachusetts, Dr. Manfred Koehler of the
University of Applied Sciences in Neubrandenburg, Germany noted that vertical
gardens can be found in the literature stretching back several thousand years to
the Mediterranean regions. There, they were used primarily for shade and the
production of fruit. During the Middle Ages in Central Europe, grapes were
commonly grown on castle walls for wine production. He also described how, more
recently in Germany, some of the first research on vertical gardens was
conducted as part of the urban ecology movement. Koehler’s research has shown a
number of benefits to vertical gardening, including a four percent reduction of
annual dust fall; helping to remove these particulates and car exhaust from city
air; removal of specific air pollutants, such as copper, chromium and aluminum;
and up to 25 percent savings in energy on north facing facades.
Many European countries have public policies in place to encourage the use of
vertical and rooftop gardens in urban areas. In Sweden, for, instance, farmer
and field biologist from Stockholm University Folke Günther has had
success with his “folkewall” (pictured right), made from two large (2 x
2.5 meter) plates of concrete. The plant growing pockets are inserted in
holes in the concrete. Water enters from the top and trickles down.
To investigate the application of green walls and roofs in
Canada, Environment Canada and several private sector partners recently
completed a report on the benefits of rooftop and vertical gardens, entitled
Greenbacks from Green Roofs: Forging a New Industry in Canada, for the Canada
Mortgage and Housing Corporation.
Researchers Steven Peck and Chris Callaghan of Peck and Associates, architect
Monica Kuhn and Dr. Brad Bass of Environment Canada found that vertical greening
has all the benefits of green roofs, but the potential positive impact is
greater, since the greening of a building’s facade often encompasses four times the area of
the roof and even more for a highrise building.
According to the report, one of the chief benefits of planting vegetation on
buildings is to reduce energy usage and therefore greenhouse gas emissions. They
found that by protecting buildings from wind, plants can reduce heating in
winter by 25 per cent and, through direct shading and evaporative cooling, air
conditioning in summer can be reduced by 50 to 75 per cent. A 16-centimeter
thick blanket of plants can increase the R-value of a wall by as much as 30 per
cent.
Wall and rooftop gardens also regulate the “urban heat island,” a phenomenon
that causes cities to be up to eight degrees C warmer than the surrounding
countryside due to re-radiated heat. Through evapo-transpiration, a layer of
vegetation can reduce the amount of re-radiated heat on a hot summer day by up
to 90 percent, thereby reducing the urban heat island by three to four degrees.
Greening Corporate Interiors
The lush interior plantings increasingly found in large corporate buildings have
taken vertical gardens indoors. For a few decades now, Toronto biologist
Wolfgang Amelung, through his company Genetron Systems Inc., has been creating
miniature indoor ecosystems using vertical plantings and water features. In the
mid-90s, he began to install large corporate applications, including
biofiltering “breathing walls” at the Toronto corporate headquarters of Canada
Life Assurance Company, Panasonic and Club Monaco.
In these installations, water flows over a lava rock wall covered by moss and
other plants, then into a small pond. Contaminants in the air are absorbed by
the vegetation and consumed by micro-organisms in the soil. Any excess waste is
carried to the pond, where it is eaten by fish, frogs or insects. There are 400
plant species and up to 60 animal species (mainly fish, small amphibians and
some insects) in the ecologically complex and stable biological community that
is the Canada Life installation.
A team of researchers from the University of Guelph (U of G) evaluated the
wall’s potential for mitigating poor indoor quality. In controlled tests, the
breathing wall was found to be capable of removing between 50 and 80 percent of
some contaminants introduced to the system. They also found that in addition to
improving air quality, the wall is esthetically pleasing, which has the
potential for producing a positive psychological effect on the occupants of the
building.
Academic institutions are also discovering the benefits of interior vertical
gardens. A 170,00 square-foot building at the University of Guelph uses a lush
wall of plants growing in its atrium as a living air purifier. The four-story
biofilter is a thick jungle of ferns, ivy and other plants, which emit microbes
that break down harmful airborne contaminants into water and carbon dioxide.
Research at U of G has shown that the system can remove half of the benzene and
toluene in the air during a single pass and up to 90 percent of the
formaldehyde.
The biofilter was developed by biological researchers at the University of
Guelph, including Alan Darlington, a graduate of who now heads his own company,
Air Quality Solutions, Ltd., which sells the living walls commercially. The wall
naturally generates fresh air, reducing the need for ventilation, heating and cooling.
Engineers estimate that up to 3.5 kilowatts per person can be saved during peak
seasons.
Darlington and his graduate supervisor Professor Mike Dixon were among those
studying the biofiltration system in the early 1990s on the vertical garden at
the Canada Life Assurance Building in downtown Toronto. His company’s
installations also include ones operating at Queen’s University, at the
headquarters of the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority and in the
Richardson Building, a private office in downtown Toronto.
Walls of Art
Some of the largest and most artful vertical gardens can be found in Paris,
France. They are the work of Patrick Blanc, who has grown plants on walls for 40
years. As a teenager, Blanc was inspired by the tropical rainforests of Malaysia
and Thailand and, in 1988, he patented the technique for growing vertical
gardens that he had started developing as a child. It involves rooting plants in
non-biodegradable felt stapled to plates of PVC affixed to a metal scaffolding.
Fertilizer is fed through a hydroponic drip irrigation system located at the top
of the wall.
In 1994, Blanc introduced his vertical gardens to the International Festival of
Gardens at Chaumont-sur-Loire. After that, commissions started to pour in. He is
now a scientist at the French national research agency (CNRS) in Paris, and an
expert on shade-dwelling plants of tropical forests. But his vertical garden
installations also reveal him to be an artist. He creates a rich and exuberant
variety of images on his living tapestries, simply by arranging diversely
colored plants on the walls.
Blanc’s murs végétals (vegetal walls), drawing from the plant communities that
thrive on wet vertical rock surfaces in nature, appear in almost a dozen
different interior and exterior locations in and around Paris, from private
residences and stores to the Musée du Quai Branly, which comprises a total of
15,000 plants in an artistic configuration.
Emilio Ambasz is an architect based in New York City who also favors vertical
gardens. His plantings play a significant role in the recent expansion and
renewal of the Buenos Aires Museum of Modern Art and Cinema, in the Argentinian
capital. The vertical garden creates a kind of screen which, as well as
concealing the older part of the building and its deteriorated facade, protects
the areas used for the galleries. In a presentation to the Greening Cities
conference in Australia in 2002, Ambasz spoke of striving for an urban future
where one can open the door and walk out directly onto a garden, regardless of
how high their office or apartment may be. He said there is a need within a high
density city to reconcile our need for building shelters that meet our emotional
requirement for green spaces.
Vertical Farming
Growing vertically can be seen from another perspective, as illustrated by the
concept being promoted by a professor at Columbia University’s Department of
Environment Health Sciences. Dickson Despommier talks about the possibility of
vertical farming in the urban environment as a way to obtain an abundant global
food supply without converting any more fragile ecosystems into farmland. By
that, he means not necessarily growing food on a wall, but in a sort of highrise
greenhouse format. He says that if traditional farming could be replaced by
constructing multi-story urban food production centers, which he has dubbed
“vertical farms,” we could see the gradual repair of many of the world’s damaged
ecosystems through the systematic abandonment of farmland.
In a paper published by The Vertical Farm Project, Despommier enthuses, “The
vertical farm should be a thing of architectural beauty as well as be highly
functional, bringing a sense of pride to the neighborhoods in which they are
built. In fact, the goal of vertical farm construction is to make them so
desirable in all aspects that every neighborhood will want one for their very
own.”
On a much smaller scale, many urban home gardeners are already able to grow an
abundant supply of produce on a small plot of land. They use trellises, nets,
strings, cages and poles to support growing plants, sometimes combined with
raised beds. Some plants will twine themselves onto the support, whereas others
require tying. Plants grown vertically take up much less ground space, and
though the yield per plant may be less, the yield per square foot is much
greater. Because vertically growing plants are more exposed, they dry out faster
and require more water than if they were spread over the ground. However, this
fast drying is advantageous to plants susceptible to fungal diseases.
So whether it’s to purify the air, grow some food or just decorate your
surroundings, try planting a wall!
Wendy Priesnitz is Natural Life Magazine's co-founder and editor.
She is a journalist with 35 years of experience and the author of nine books.
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