Green roofs and living walls offer many benefits,  including  cooling buildings, reducing storm-water runoff, providing wildlife  habitat, growing food and creating jobs.
What Is a Green  Roof? 
A green roof is an  extension of a new or existing roof that involves a  high-quality water proofing and root re-pellant system, a drainage  system, filter cloth, a lightweight growing medium and plants. Green  roof systems may be modular, with drainage layers, filter cloth, growing  media and plants already prepared in movable, interlocking grids, or,  each component may be installed separately. Green roof development  involves the creation of "contained" green space on top of a human-made  structure. This green space could be below, at or above grade, but in  all cases the plants are not planted in the "ground." 
One Size Does Not Fit All
There is no  single type of green roof that works for all buildings,  climates and client needs. Green roofs can be categorized as "intensive"  or "extensive," depending on the depth of growing medium. Six inches or  less growing medium depth is an extensive roof, also characterized by  its lower weight, lower plant diversity, cost and maintenance. Intensive  green roofs have more than six inches of growing media and tend to have  higher plant diversity, higher weight, cost and maintenance.
   
Green Roofs Moderate Building Temperatures
One benefit green  roofs provide is increased savings on heating and  cooling energy costs. Results vary according to size of the building,  climate and type of green roof, but when Environment Canada ran a  simulation, they found that a typical one-story building with a grass  roof and 3.9 inches (10 cm) of growing medium would result in a 25%  reduction in summer cooling needs. Field experiments by Karen Liu in  Ottawa found that a 6-inch extensive green roof reduced heat gains by  95% and heat losses by 26% compared to a conventional reference roof.
Reducing Urban Heat Island  Effect and Pollution
Green roofs decrease the cost of meeting greenhouse gas reductions and  adapting to climate change by reducing the "urban heat island effect" --  the phenomenon of metropolitan areas being significantly warmer than  surrounding rural areas, due to the heat-reflecting nature of concrete  and other man-made materials and the release of heat from  air-conditioning systems and machinery. The reintroduction of vegetation  into cities promotes natural cooling by absorbing, instead of  reflecting, the sun's rays, and through evapotranspiration.  Traditional  black roofs can reach temperatures of 158°F/70°C, and as a result have  an enormous effect on building and ground level temperatures.  One study  concluded that 25% green roof coverage can reduce the urban heat island  effect by up to 1.8°F/1°C. Green roofs can also mitigate air pollution  levels by trapping particulates and capturing harmful gases.
By Damon van der Linde and Steven Peck
 
 
Serving the Greater St Louis Region.
Part 8: 1st Floor Weatherization
Part 9: See the Difference a Little White Paint Makes
Part 10: Interior Framing-Plumbing-Laundry Room
Part 11: Kitchen Framing Tip #36-Benton Rehab Project
Part 12: Water Main Repair- Benton Rehab
Part 13: Benton Rehab Project Drywall Installation and Tip: Number 1172
Scott's Contracting