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Advertising supplement provided by
American Hydrotech, Inc.
By Celeste Allen Novak, AIA, LEED AP
Case Studies
Some garden roofs are sloped or even curved, such as the
building for Gap, Inc. in San Bruno, California, designed
by William McDonough + Partners, of Charlottesville, Virginia.
How many buildings do you know that have made oxygen
lately? William McDonough, FAIA, often asks architects.
Intensive garden roofs are designed for a maximum slope of
51-to-300 millimeters (two- to twelve-inches).
Extensive garden roofs can have steeper slopes, and some
green roofs have been installed up to a 45 degree slope. Design
for roof slopes requires analysis of the climate, wind direction,
and sun angles. The amount of snow, and rain patterns, will
affect the type of plant on each side of the roof slope, depending
upon the roof orientation.
Bruce Eisenberg, AIA, Director of Architecture for the New
York City Department of Parks and Recreation, in Flushing,
New York, is completing design in 2005 for a new green roof
at the Marine Park Senior Center, in Brooklyn, with estimated
completion in 2007. As the first sustainable green building
designed in-house by city employees, the structure will be
equipped with photovoltaic solar panels, a geothermal system,
and an extensive green roof, which blends into the environment.
It will reduce the heat island effect of the urban location
and reduce stormwater runoff, keeping much of it on-site,
while removing pollutants, thereby reducing the impact on
the Citys overloaded waste system. The green roof,
with an unusual round form, and rooftop photovoltaics, responds
to the environment, says Eisenberg. The design team
is striving for compliance with the U.S. Green Building Councils
(USGBC) rating system, Leadership in Energy and Environmental
Design (LEED), and a silver rating.
In 2005, Eisenberg noted, Mayor Michael Bloomberg signed
legislation mandating that by 2007, 50 percent of all New
York City agencies with capital projects exceeding two million
dollars will be required to comply with the USGBCS LEED
program, with the goal of achieving silver ratings. This law
will significantly increase interest and demand for green
roofs with New York City.
Architects Pappageorge Haymes Ltd., designed the rooftop
at the Domain Lofts at ePort, in Chicago, Illinois. The site
was an abandoned Montgomery Ward & Company Catalog House,
with a footprint too wide for rehabilitation as housing. The
designers chose to remove a large swathe of interior construction
building new walls and a new roof exposed to the elements.
This is an example of how architects can design a new roofscape
for tenants where the view to the garden is better than the
view on the street.
Gardens improve the quality of life, and add quantifiable
real estate value to projects and the built environment. Green
roofs are a good business decision for rooftops of new mixed-use
housing complexes, and hotels with rooms facing rooftop vents
and gravel landscapes.
Research demonstrates that human health is improved by exposure
to nature, fresh air and growing plants. In hospital and healthcare
environments, views to natural landscapes enhance healing,
and gardens have traditionally served as sources of respite
and inspiration. The Japanese create Zen gardens for meditation.
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