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Roofing technology developed in Germany
is starting to take root in North America
By Nancy B. Solomon, AIA
The main draw for green roofs in Germany
is, undoubtedly, their environmental benefits. Top on the
list is their contribution to storm-water management. In highly
developed, densely populated regions, the sewer infrastructure
can be overwhelmed by the amount of water that quickly flows
off conventional roofs during a heavy downpour. A green roof
slows down, reduces, and even cleanses storm-water runoff.
Its like having a giant sponge on the roof,
says Brian Lambert, marketing manager with the Garland Company,
a roofing manufacturer based in Cleveland.
This permeable surface absorbs and retains
water, allowing much of it to evapotranspire, and only very
slowly releasing the rest to the groundat which point
it has a chance of reaching an aquifer rather than simply
disappearing down a pipe. According to an industry rule of
thumb, notes Roger Schickedantz, AIA, associate partner at
William McDonough + Partners in Charlottesville, Virginia,
a green roof with low-growing vegetation can absorb about
70 percent of the rainwater it receives. And air pollutants
that often get swept up with the precipitation, including
nitrogen and phosphorous, are filtered out by the vegetation
before they can pollute groundwater or streams.
Another major factor is a green roofs
contribution toward alleviating the heat island effect, an
ever-increasing problem in major urban centers. Exposed blacktop
roofs are notorious for reaching very high temperatures in
the summer and raising the ambient air in the process. Plants
counteract this phenomenon. In addition, vegetated roofs help
moderate a buildings internal temperature, purify the
outside air, and provide habitats for plants, insects, and
birds.
Green-roof proponents list other benefits,
as well. Although more expensive up-front, green roofs may
be more economical over time: Stewart Comstock, water-resources
engineer at Marylands Department of Environment, in
Baltimore, estimates that, in five to seven years, operational
savings in terms of energy consumption and maintenance costs
will offset the construction premium associated with a simple
green roof with low-growing vegetation. In addition, living
roofs provide aesthetic and psychological relief to a concrete-and-asphalt
urban jungle.
Transplanting to North America
As green-roof technology has improved
and our own environmental challenges loom ever larger, government
leaders and clients are slowly realizing that the benefits
of a living roof can also apply on this side of the Atlantic.
In fact, green roofs are gradually being
added to the regulatory toolbox for storm-water management
in the United States. Marylands Department of Environment,
for example, recommends that local jurisdictions consider
it a permeable surface. Taking heed, Anne Arundel County now
equates green roofs with grassy surfaces when calculating
the amount of water that a new development must retain and
treat, says Merrill Plait, chief engineer for the countys
Office of Planning and Zoning.
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| Chiropractic
Health Center, Luzerne County, Pa. Although most
often applied to flat planes, green roofs can also
be installed on sloped and even curved surfaces
(left and below). Here, plastic lumber battens were
attached at the steepest sections to prevent soil
slippage. Fabric mesh held soil in place until plant
roots took hold. Water drains freely, although slowly,
from green roof to eave. The extensive roof was
planted with a type of sedum (far below). Van der
Ryn Architects of Sausalito, California, designed
the center. |
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With regard to the urban heat island
effect, one highly visible experiment with green roofs is
taking place in Chicago. Concerned about the public health
threat due to the increasing summer heat differential between
downtown Chicago and its outlying suburbs, Mayor Richard M.
Daley encouraged the Chicago Department of Environment to
look into possible solutions. This effort has resulted in
a 20,300-square-foot green roof on top of Chicagos City
Hall [record, February 2003, page 79]. The pilot project,
completed in 2001, will test various plant types and green-roof
systems for this region. The design team included Weston Solutions,
an environmental engineering company based in West Chester,
Pennsylvania; McDonough + Partners; and Conservation Design
Forum, a landscape architecture and planning firm in Elmhurst,
Illinois.
Ever pragmatic, U.S. building owners
are being motivated not just by environmental gains: Longevity
is one of the places where our clients see benefits,
observes Russell Perry, AIA, managing partner at McDonough
+ Partners. To understand why, consider the three conditions
that typically damage a conventional, black-membrane roof:
brittleness caused by the suns UV radiation; thermal
shock due to temperature differential between top and bottom
layers; and punctures resulting from pedestrian traffic or
dropped tools. The vegetation and soil layers of a green roof
protect the membrane from all three.
Assuming the membrane is properly installed
at the beginning, it should last much longer than an exposed
roof membrane. No one knows for sure, as green roofs have
not been in place long enough, but some in the industry have
suggested a doubling or even quadrupling of the membranes
life, thereby estimating a life expectancy of 20 to 40 years.
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