Δευτέρα 6 Αυγούστου 2012

Going Vertical/ Φυτεύοντας Κάθετα



Green walls: Function or fad?  As cities and their buildings all around the world are being covered in green, we take a look the phenomenon of Green Walls.
The first example of green walls may be found in the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, even if they may have been more roof gardens than green walls. Later, from Scandinavia to Japan, numerous civilizations used climbing plants to cover buildings, making what is now called ‘green façades’.  Green façades were very important in the Art and Crafts and Modern style movements in Europe. For instance, in the beginning of the 20th century, the ‘Jugendstil‘ movement used climbing plants (Parthenocissus tricuspidata) on the buildings to make a changeover between the house and the garden. In England, Garden Cities showed great examples of green façades.  William Robinson and Gertrude Jekyll designed outdoor vegetated rock walls used for screening & boundaries in gardens. You can still see such examples in Griftpark (Ultrecht, Netherlands).  The use of climbing plants declined in the 30′s, due to new building techniques and people’s concern about possible consequences on wall stability.

Vegetated Stone Structure, Groenkapel Griftpark, Utrecht
Green façades have always been less common in North America, but what we nowadays call ‘vertical gardens’ seems to have first been theorized in the U.S. in 1937 by Stanley Hart White. His theories are now being used once again by Illinois University Urbania Champaign students.

EcoCathédrale by LeRoy, in Mildrann, Netherlands, 1970s
Green walls became famous decades after Stanley Hart White’s first experiments. Patrick LeBlanc, a French botanist, is pictured as the first one to design the ‘modern’ pattern of green walls, with a full hydroponic system, an inert medium and numerous exotic species (see his first green wall, at the Museum of Science and Industry).

Paris Mur Vegetal by Patrick LeBlanc at Musee Branly Jean Nouvel
What is a green wall?
Let’s focus on living walls, also called ‘biowalls’, ‘vertical gardens’ or ‘Vertical Vegetated Complex Walls’ (VCW). You can picture it as a cliff: the synthetic medium is the interface to which the cliff growing plant species can hang onto. The hydroponic system is often used to create a succession of dry periods and humid ones.
One of the more important moments in the design process of a green wall is the choosing of species: you must choose plants which will grow straight and will have beautiful lower foliage, as they will be seen from underneath. The first living walls used tropical plants but the choice is now much larger.  As more recent green walls are often showing beautiful patterns, it is becoming a new urban art.

Van-Gogh's "Wheat Field with Cypresses" as a living painting at the National-Gallery Trafalgar Sq
Why green walls?
They have multiple impacts on cities and citizens: they protect buildings from the effects of the natural elements, they are introducing more gardens in urban areas and they can even be used to grow vegetables!
Under sun exposure, a bare wall will contribute to heat conduction inside the building, making the internal building temperature rise, and contributing to the urban ‘heat island’ effect.  But green walls, where the leaves of plants lose water through evapotranspiration, lower the surrounding air and building temperatures. Green walls also depress locally the cities temperature: they create a microclimate.

Patrick Blanc’s Vertical Garden in Madrid
The Tokyo Institute of Technology proved that green walls lower the energetic loss of buildings. They also prevent the creation of urban dust (partly due to the effect of wind over buildings) and absorb heavy metal particulates from the atmosphere.
However, the first consequence of making living walls is the creation of new green spaces in cities, where available spaces are scarce. Green walls are still newcomers in landscape architecture, and innovation is fast in this sector. They are invading new places every day.  On bridges and roads, they can cover ugly or decaying concrete structures, such as in Mexico City.

VerdMX, Mexico City Vertical Garden
Every country invents new solutions to answer its own particular problems. In Canada, where winters are very long, many green walls are placed inside buildings to help offset SAD (Seasonal Affective Disorder) syndrome.


We need gardens to be happier, even scientists have proven as much (biophilia hypothesis) Let’s build some green walls to achieve this goal!  One must not forget that, as with every green space, green walls have advantages and drawbacks (non-biodegradable medium and often huge water needs) and must be thought only as a part of the solution to make our concrete jungle greener cities
Article written by Marie-Laure Séguin

πηγη :landarchs.com

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