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Green Walls in Buildings

A green wall inside a building

Green walls are essentially a living, and therefore self-regenerating, cladding system using climbing plants. Whilst climbers have been used traditionally on buildings for centuries, modern methods using high-tensile steel cables have enabled the concept to be used far more adventurously. Contemporary architecture is also more suitable in many ways for facade greening than traditional buildings. With suitable species selection, heights of up to 25m can be attained – additionally if plants can be grown in large irrigated containers at height, then even greater heights can be reached.

How green Walls are build

The most commonly used species for wall-greening are ivy (Hedera sp.), Russian-vine (Fallopia sp.) and Virginia-creeper (Parthenocissus sp.). Both will climb directly onto wall faces, especially those of brick and stone where the porous surface allows them to attach more easily but the installation of trellises and wires can aid their growth, and to some extent serve to liit the direct contact between wall and plant. All can relatively quickly form a dense evergreen foliage many metres in height, and on many older buildings this is actively managed to ensure that it does not obscure windows and other openings. Such dense foliage provides an effective nesting habitat for a variety of birds, including robin, wren and blackbird, as well as serving to baffle noise.

A green wall inside an office

A number of varieties have colourful foliage, that will change with the seasons, often turning red or golden during autumn.
Even small, difficult spaces have potential Other climbers, such as clematis (Clematis sp.), honeysuckle (Lonicera sp.), wisteria (Wisteria sp.), passion-flower (Passiflora sp.), bougainvillea (Bougainvillea sp.) morning-glory (Ipomoea sp.) and jasmine (Jasminum sp.) can be highly decorative, although will be usually slower-growing and not as bulky. Many will have highly colourful flowers that can serve as nectar sources for insects, as well as providing a pleasant scent.
Although it is often thought that these climbing plants can damage wall surfaces through their tendrils and feathered adventitious rootlets (in the case of ivy), in most cases if the wall is solid and well-built there is no reason why damage should occur. Care should be taken, however, in respect of walls with cavities or with crumbling mortar in which roots could take hold and expand.

Large-scale use of green walls is still a very new concept, however there is a solid research base, which has developed in Germany over the last 20 years. Active research is a major concern for several German academic institutions.
Visual Advantages Public perception of contemporary architecture is often poor, with it being seen as barren and sterile. However, just as street trees do much to improve public perception of urban environments, so climbing plants can do the same for buildings. Large climbers, up to 25m high, can be extremely dramatic visually, as well as softening what may be seen as hard surfaces.

Climbing plants have traditionally been seen as ‘add-ons’ to buildings. The new approach, being pioneered in Switzerland and Germany, is to see them as integral to the design concept. Clearly this makes sense in both visual terms and in designing in practical features.
In addition to being used on buildings, climbers can be used on freestanding structures such as giant ‘pergolas’ or on poles. see MFO park illustration.

Advantages for Environment and Sustainability Private benefits
Climbers can dramatically reduce the maximum temperatures of a building by shading walls from the sun, the daily temperature fluctuation being reduced by as much as 50%. The effectiveness of this cooling effect is related primarily to the total area shaded rather than the thickness of the climber (Köhler 1993). Together with the insulation effect, temperature fluctuations at the wall surface can be reduced from between –10º/14ºF to 60ºC/140ºF to between 5ºC/41ºF and 30º/86ºF (Peck et al 1999). The use of climbers to reduce solar heating is most effective if they are used on the wall that faces the sun, together with the west wall, which experiences afternoon heating.

Evergreen climbers provide winter insulation, by not only by maintaining a pillow of air between the plant and the wall, but by reducing wind chill on the wall surface. Reducing wind chill by 75% can reduce heating demand by 25% (Peck et al 1999). Reduction of wind chill is also reduced to some extent by the interwoven stems of deciduous climbers during winter. The effectiveness of winter insulation is related to the thickness of growth, which is generally related to the age of the plant. In some cases however growth patterns change as the plant ages, e.g. there may be a reduction in the dense twiggy growth that forms the most effective insulation.
Climbers on buildings can help protect the surface of the building from damage from very heavy rainfall and hail, and possibly can play some role in intercepting and temporarily holding water during rainstorms, in the way that green roofs do. They also help to shield the surface from ultra-violet light, which might be an important consideration for certain modern cladding materials.

General Pro for green walls

Climbers have been shown to be highly effective at trapping dust and at concentrating certain dust-derived pollutants in their tissues, particularly in those tissues that are then discarded. In a study of climbers lead and cadmium concentrations were shown to be highest in dead leaves and dead wood. These heavy metals are thus taken out of the atmosphere and rain and concentrated in a form that then falls to the ground (Köhler 1993). The removal of dead leaves and branches and their disposal in sites where the concentrated heavy metals can do minimal environmental damage is thus a key factor in reducing the dangers presented by these elements.
There is strong anecdotal evidence that climbers on buildings help to reduce noise levels.

Reduction of solar heating of the sides of buildings helps to reduce the ‘heat island effect’, i.e. the effect whereby urban areas accentuate high temperatures in summer.
All green plants absorb CO2 emissions, thus climbers in urban areas help to reduce the contribution made to human-induced global warming.

All plants also absorb and breakdown a variety of pollutants, notably volatile organic compounds, and unburnt hydrocarbons from vehicle exhaust. It is a reasonable assumption that urban climbers could play a role in reducing these in city areas.

The use of climbing plants offers a very elegant solution to the problem of how to contribute to the local and regional biodiversity targets. Because they take up little horizontal space, but make use of vertical space that would otherwise be lifeless, they can add considerably to the area, which is potential habitat without taking up room on the ground.

http://www.verticalgardenpatrickblanc.com/#/en/projects/typological/museums/197

The green walls also provide an opportunity for wildlife. Any climbing plant will offer habitat to invertebrates, such as insects and spiders, which in turn will be food for insect-eating birds and bats. Any climber will also act as a transit route for wildlife between habitat at ground level and those established on roofs in the form of green roofs.

Glenn Murcutt – Sustainable Architecture

Green Building

About Glenn Murcutt

It is obvious that Glenn Murcutt is a more of a underdog in the architect scene today. He works with ordinary materials and on much smaller scales than his colegues. His Green Buildings are not luxurious and he has no partners. His architectures are normaly reffering to the climate and the environmental circumstances of native Australia.

Glenn Murcutt is currently guest professor at the yale university, Aahrus School of Architecture, And Montana high. He is Australias most famous architect and has won a lot of architecture awards during the past years. He is mostly awarded in the ecological architecture and green building sector.

With his desing of sustainable architecture and the style of his green buildings Glenn Murcutt clearly makes a point in modern architecture.
The Following video is one of my famous interview with Glenn Murcutt talking about sustainability.

Glenn Murcutt has extensive international lecturing experience and has recently lectured at UCLA, Washington University St. Louis, Portland Museum, Maine, Federation of Icelandic Architects, Reykjavic, Danish Academy of Architects and Columbia University.

Not only Glenn Murcutt was a jury member for the competition for the Jean-Marie Tjibaou Cultural Centre New Caledonia he also was at Chair of the jury for the international student competition for a shelter for Alvar Aalto’s boat.

The most interesting books of Glenn Murcutt you can find here !

The Green Workplace

‘The Green Workplace,’ a New Book Authored by HOK’s Leigh Stringer, is Published by Palgrave-MacMillan

Featuring Real-World Examples from Fortune 500 Companies, the Book Showcases Sustainable Strategies that Benefit Employees, the Environment and the Bottom Line.

07.28.2009 – WASHINGTON, D.C. – HOK, a leading practitioner of green design and consulting services, today announced the public release of The Green Workplace, a book already heralded by reviewers as a “must have” for businesses seeking to survive and thrive in this new, greener era. Authored by HOK Vice President Leigh Stringer, The Green Workplace is a comprehensive guide that demonstrates how green businesses can reduce costs, enhance productivity, improve recruitment and retention, increase shareholder value, and contribute to a healthier natural environment.

Green Workplace is a new phenomenon i the going green movement

Published by Palgrave-MacMillan and available August 4 in bookstores and online, The Green Workplace features real-world examples from Bloomberg, Google, Sprint, Adobe, Texas Instruments and dozens of other companies that have implemented specific green practices and experienced the benefits. The book provides insights into human behavior and techniques to encourage employees to green their actions. It also illustrates opportunities to leverage the latest technology to green an organization’s buildings and overall business.

“’Green is Good’ may indeed be the business mantra of the 21st century, but it takes a commitment to proven best practices and creative approaches to ensure that ‘green’ means ‘profitable,’” Stringer said. “The Green Workplace draws on the experience of successful green companies to craft a practical resource for helping companies consider how specific actions – big and small – can improve the bottom line while enabling them to better serve their people, stakeholders, communities and natural environment.

“The book already has earned early praise from several corporate leaders. “This is one of the most useful books I have ever read—Leigh Stringer has taken on ‘green’ in the most holistic of ways,” said Chris Hood, program manager of the HP Workplace. “Stringer’s passion and enthusiasm for the subject is infectious; no contemporary business organization should be without this book.”

Bricault Residence Venice, California, 2008

Vancouver-based architecture firm Bricault Design is developing projects not only in architecture, but also in interior design, graphic design and product development in playful and customized ways. Among their architectural designs are a Brooklyn brownstone renovation, a Regina convent conversion, and a home addition located on Brooks Avenue, which can literally be called a “green building”.

 

Bricault Residence Venice, California, 2008, exterior

Bricault Residence Venice, California, 2008, exterior

 

They basically maintained and remodeled an existing 2,000-square-foot building, while also supplementing it with the mentioned 1,700-square-foot space due to the need for more space for the growing family, flirting with many aspects of sustainable architecture: green lush living wall on three sides, green roof, and open courtyard.The grasses and shrubs that are watered with a combination of harwested rainwater and recycled domestic water, while cedar batten siding helps shade the interior spaces.

Bricault Residence Venice, California, 2008, interior

Bricault Residence Venice, California, 2008, interior

The ground level of the extension includes large glass doors that swing open to the courtyard, providing a connection between the indoor and outdoor spaces. This feature, together with the addition of a spiraling staircase linking the ground floor with the roof as a chimney, drawing ventilation throughout the interior of the house, eliminates the need for air conditioning.

Almost all electric needs are met via the solar panels. High-efficiency combination boiler supplies radiant in-floor heating and domestic hot water. The building was insulated with recycled cotton and spray foam. Not to mention other green features, namely cork-rubber flooring, non-toxic / low-VOC paint, formaldehyde-free cabinetry, LED lighting, and low-flush toilets.

Ecological Architect, Modernist and Humanitarian: Shigeru Ban

Famous for his usage of paper as an architectural component, particularly  recycled cardboard paper tubes used to quickly and efficiently house disaster victims, Ban shakes much of architectural conventions. He doesn’t only use an unusual palette, he also designs structures that don’t have very long lives and used out of recycleable materials. He just doesn’t like waste.

 

Takatori Catholic Church, Hyogo, Japan. Designed by Shigeru Ban

Ban is not interested in the ‘newest’ materials and techniques, but whether or not the building or design is serving its conceptual and functional purpose. The clients for the 1995 curtain wall house, for instance, wanted a contemporary home that would have the openness of the traditional Japanese house.  In his design, two-floor block of open living space is sandwiched between a large, overhanging triangular roof and deck that extend almost to the curbed line. Around the perimeter of the triangle Ban hung billowing white curtain that can be opened or closed to regulate the degree of transparency between interior and exterior. When he was reminded that Ludwig Mies Van der Rohe invented the glass curtain wall, he said, ‘but I just used a curtain’.

 

Curtain Wall House, Itabashi-Ku, Tokyo, exterior

Curtain Wall House, Itabashi-Ku, Tokyo, interior

Omega Center for Sustainable Living (OCSL): first living building in USA

But, a Living building?

It should “Be informed by their eco-region’s characteristics; generate all of their own energy with renewable resources; capture and treat all of their water; operate efficiently; and be designed for maximum beauty.” In other words, OCSL is carbon neutral and produces 100 percent of its own energy through solar and geothermal power.

Opened on July 16, 2009, it is also a learning center for water treatment. Inside its 4,500-square-foot greenhouse is the Eco-Machine, OCSL’s water-reclamation system. In four stages the Eco-Machine purifies wastewater from Omega’s whole campus. The system adheres to the principle of biomimicry in mimicing the natural and ancient processes of the earth.

The cost of the OCSL was 35 to 40 percent more than a traditional building, but it will pay for itself in the long run,  because it is “virtually cost free, except for maintenance.”

The building is on track to receive a LEED Platinum Certification, which cannot be officially granted until the building has been in operation for a year. LEED, (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) is designed by the U.S. Green Building Council which has created standards for sustainable design.

for more information: http://www.eomega.org

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