Professional Practice

Green Infrastructure: Green Roofs and Walls

Green roofs can help regulate a building¡¯s internal temperature, reduce stormwater runoff, and mitigate the urban heat island effect. Green roofs offer significant economic benefits, including a longer roof life and heating and cooling energy savings. Green roofs also provide an opportunity for urban food production, and increasing urban biodiversity. If well-designed and cared for, green roofs can offer people the psychological benefits of nature.

For more information on residential infrastructure, please visit our Residential Design Guides: Water, Energy, Planting, and Low-Impact Materials.

Green roofs benefits include:

Economic

  • Green roofs can extend a roof¡¯s lifespan by two or three times. According to Sustainable South Bronx, on a 90 degree day a green roof is about 80¡ãF, while a black roof is 175¡ãF, causing substantial wear and tear.
  • A University of Michigan study showed that a 21,000 square feet $464,000 green roof will save $200,000 over its lifetime. ¡°Nearly two-thirds of these savings would come from reduced energy needs for the building with the green roof.¡±  (1)
Energy Use
  • Energy savings: A typical 2-3 story building could experience 15-25 percent savings in summertime energy costs. (1)

Water Management

  • Green roofs can catch 40-60 percent of stormwater, reducing flow into a city¡¯s sewers (1)
  • Green roofs led to approximately 65 percent reduced peak flows and 55 percent reduced runoff volumes, according to an E.P.A. overview of peer-reviewed literature. (2)
  • Modelling conducted on Manchester, England, found that adding green roofs to all buildings in town centers, retail, and high-density residential could reduce run off by 17 - 20 percent. (3)
  • The green roof on FedEx¡¯s Main Sorting Facility at O¡¯Hare covers nearly 175,000 square feet, captures close to two million gallons of stormwater annually, and will save the company an estimated $35,000 in energy costs per year. (4)

Reducing Air Pollution, Urban Heat, & Atmospheric Carbon Levels

  • A study quantifying ecosystem services resulting from Portland, Oregon¡¯s green infrastructure practices in 2009 found that green roofs reduced particulate matter less than 10 micrometers in diameter (PM-10) by 7.7 lbs, created 8,270 + kWh/Acre energy savings, and sequestered 7.1 metric tonnes of carbon emissions per acre per year. (5)

Urban Heat

  • A modeling study found that adding green roofs to 50 percent of the available surfaces in downtown Toronto would cool the entire city by 0.2 to 1.4¡ãF (0.1 to 0.8¡ãC). (1)
  • A Toronto study found two green roofs with minimal vegetation reduced peak summertime roof membrane temperatures by 35¡ãF and summertime heat flow through roofs by 70-90 percent compared with a conventional roof, substantially reducing energy needs for cooling. (1)
  • A study conducted at the University of Central Florida found the maximum average day temperatures for conventional roof surface was 130¡ãF, while the maximum average for green roof was 91¡ãF, which is 39¡ãF lower than the conventional roof. (1)

Green walls include most of the benefits of green roofs, but also:

  • Temperatures behind green walls can be reduced by as much as 10 degree celsius. 
  • Green walls can help reduce sound reflection
  • Through shading, green walls can lower temperatures in summer and reduce energy costs by 23 percent. (6)

Sources:  
1. ",¡± U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and    
2.  Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
3.  Natural England
4. ¡°Banking on Green: A Look at How Green Infrastructure Can Save Municipalities Money and Provide Economic Benefits Community-wide.¡± Ë¿¹ÏÊÓÆµ
5.  Environmental Services, City of Portland  
6. ¡°¡± Susan Loh, Australian Council of Built Environment Design Professionals, August 2008  

Organizations



, Pennsylvania State University



Resources

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Government Resources

¡°,¡± Chief Building Official and Executive Director, Toronto Building and Chief Planner and Executive Director, City Planning, March 2009

 (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency)

 (City of Toronto Government, Canada)

Research

Green Roof - Ë¿¹ÏÊÓÆµ AerialAmerican Society of Landscape Architects (Ë¿¹ÏÊÓÆµ) Headquarters Green Roof, Washington, D.C. / Image credit: Ë¿¹ÏÊÓÆµ
 

 Urban Affairs, 2013

Environmental Protection Agency, 2012

¡°Capturing Rainwater from Rooftops: An Efficient Water Resource Management Strategy that Increases Supply and Reduces Pollution,¡± Natural Resource Defense Council (NRDC), 2011

   Environmental Protection Agency, 2009

"," Green Economy Taskforce, Sustainable Business Network of Greater Philadelphia, 2009

¡°¡± How Stuff Works

¡°,¡± Sustainable South Bronx, October 2008

¡°,¡± K.J. Mulligan and S.C. Page, 2008

¡°,¡± Maureen Connelly and Murray Hodgson, 2008

¡°,¡± U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

"," Green Roofs for Healthy Cities, September 2008

¡°,¡± Susan Loh, Australian Council of Built Environment Design Professionals, August 2008

¡°,¡± Robert Berghage, Al Jarrett, David Beattie, Kathleen Kelley, Shazia Husain, Farzaneh Rezai, Bret Long, Ayako Negassi, Robert Cameron, and William Hunt, 2007

"," Water Environment Research Foundation, June 2007

¡°,¡± Cynthia Rosenzweig, Stuart Gaffin, and Lily Parshall (editors), Columbia University Center for Climate Change Research and NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies, 2006

¡°,¡± New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, October 2006

¡°,¡± Green Roofs for Healthy Cities

¡°,¡± Susan Weiler and Katrin Scholz-Barth, Wiley, 2005

Role of the Landscape Architect

Green Roof - Ë¿¹ÏÊÓÆµ Pink BloomAmerican Society of Landscape Architects (Ë¿¹ÏÊÓÆµ) Headquarters Green Roof, Washington, D.C. / Image credit: Ë¿¹ÏÊÓÆµ
 

At the larger scale, landscape architects analyze the context and connectivity of green roofs within the urban landscape, seeing them as opportunities to create networks for wildlife habitat and stormwater management. Landscape architects also play a primary role in the details of green roof design, from selecting the plants to specifying the growth media and structural elements. Landscape architects also take advantage of the psychological benefits of providing more access to green vegetation and outdoor social spaces. From small urban rowhomes to apartment and office buildings and large institutions such as schools and government buildings, landscape architects meld the many social, educational, economic, and ecological benefits of green roofs.

Projects

Ë¿¹ÏÊÓÆµ Headquarters Green Roof, Washington, D.C. (Michael Van Valkenburgh & Associates, Inc.)

Brooklyn Botanic Garden Visitors Center, Brooklyn (HMWhite)

California Academy of Sciences, San Francisco, CA (SWA Group)

Changi Airport Terminal 3 Interior Landscape, Singapore (Tierra Design (S) Pte Ltd.)

Chicago City Hall Green Roof, Chicago, Illinois (Conservation Design Forum)

Green Roof - Chicago green wallË¿¹ÏÊÓÆµ 2011 Professional Analysis and Planning Honor Award, Adding Green to Urban Design Chicago, City of Chicago / Image credit: City of Chicago and Hitchcock Design Group
 

Corporate Headquarters, San Francisco, CA (OLIN)

Gannett/USA Today Headquarters, McLean, Virginia (Michael Vergason Landscape Architects, Ltd.)

Green Roof Innovation Testing (GRIT) Laboratory, Toronto (University of Toronto, John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape, and Design)

Lafayette Greens: Urban Agriculture, Urban Fabric, Urban Sustainability, Detroit (Kenneth Weikal Landscape Architecture)

Manassas Park Elementary School Landscape, Manassas Park, VA (Siteworks)

Macallen Building, South Boston, MA (Landworks Studio, Inc.)

Museo del Acero Horno3, Monterrey, Mexico (Surfacedesign Inc.+ Harari arquitectos) 

, New York, NY (NYC Parks) 

Nueva School, Hillsborough, California (Andrea Cochran Landscape Architects)

Rooftop Haven for Urban Agriculture, Chicago, Illinois (Hoerr Schaudt Landscape Architects)

Washington Mutual Center Roof Garden, Seattle, Washington (Phillips Farevaag Smallenberg)

Animations

Leveraging the Landscape to Manage Water, Ë¿¹ÏÊÓÆµ


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