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Advertising supplement provided by
American Hydrotech, Inc.
By Celeste Allen Novak, AIA, LEED AP
Extensive Garden Roofs are Worth the
Effort
An extensive garden roof is usually much lighter and thinner
than the intensive roof. Since it is typically not intended
for additional usable space, developers question whether it
is worth the effort. As land values rise, developers need
to maximize building footprints. Small sites and large parking
requirements leave little room for stormwater storage. The
usual solution is to bury large storage tanks under the pavement
for storage and filtration or to direct all stormwater to
city storm systems. Shrinking stormwater infrastructures have
placed more fees on developers, thereby encouraging green
roofs as viable solutions.

Assembly of Extensive
Garden Roof.
Photo Courtesy American Hydrotech, Inc. |
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The more green roof you put on, the less stormwater
you have to put somewhere else, explained landscape
architect Cheryl Zuellig, ASLA, of JJR, in Ann Arbor, Michigan.
Research studies at the Russell E. Larson Agricultural Research
Center by Penn State University quantified a 50 percent reduction
in runoff from a three-and-one-half-inch green roof. Continued
studies are proving the stormwater retention of green roofs
in many climates, different soil thicknesses and the type
of plants. Green roof providers will help design professionals
calculate the amount of storage available by design on a roof,
based on climate data and required local stormwater codes.
Municipalities determine rainfall in many ways. The quantity
of rain is calculated by quantifying the average rainfall,
as well as the frequency and magnitude of a storm event. The
most common criteria for rainfall are the amount recorded
in a 100-year storm. This is defined as the amount of rainfall
that has a one percent chance in any given year of being equaled
or exceeded. Building codes require that developed properties
should minimize stormwater run-off onto other properties,
or into storm sewers. Washtenaw County, Michigan is one of
many municipalities to research new stormwater infiltration
systems. They are waiting for the research data to confirm
what many Europeans already know: green roofs are an effective
stormwater mechanism and will lead to a decrease in the cost
of municipal infrastructure.

Courtesy American
Hydrotech, Inc. |
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Green roofs can solve this problem, if designers understand
the trade-offs involved for stormwater detention. Rainy Portland,
Oregon is statistically only slightly wetter than Michigan.
The difference in Portland, which allows designers a one-to-one
trade-off for green roofs as stormwater detention, is that
the typical storm event consists of light rainfall that falls
over a longer period of time. In Michigan, a storm will flood
the storm sewers quickly, requiring a larger storage capacity
to accommodate potentially larger flood storage. A typical
roof system in Portland can be more shallow than a roof system
in Michigan.
The rooftop garden at JBG Companies in suburban Maryland
is an example of an extensive roof garden designed for storm
water management. The site was in a community concerned with
impervious surfaces and rising taxes. One of a cluster of
buildings, Woodland Park One, was built on a site that had
been completely paved. Jef Fuller, AIA, managing principal
of DNC Architects, Inc., realized he had an opportunity to
solve a stormwater problem and increase the value of the property
to the developer.
In Maryland, if an architect can increase the area that can
absorb rainwater by 20 percent beyond the existing development
footprint, then there is a waiver of one-to-one per area for
stormwater requirements. For Fuller, this meant that the building
area would be increased if he could place the stormwater detention
above ground, instead of burying it under the parking area.
Calculations proved that the costs were identical if he put
a green roof on the building, instead of burying the stormwater
in an underground tank. Additionally, the green roof had the
advantage of being part of the viewscape for office workers
in the higher buildings, which were in the next phase. The
roof was completed in 2003 and requires no irrigation, and
maintenance is minimal.
Fuller demonstrated to his client, JBG, and to Montgomery
County authorities that the green roof would decrease the
sites impervious area from 88 percent to 40 percent.
Through his calculations, the owner saved permit time, reduced
underground storm storage tanks, and complied with Marylands
Smart Growth initiative for green roofs.
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