81
Green Roofs & Walls 方方 方方 方方方方方

Green Roofs

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

green roofs, construction

Citation preview

Page 1: Green Roofs

Green Roofs & Walls

方煒 彙整台大生機系

Page 2: Green Roofs

Green Roofs

Page 3: Green Roofs

科學人 第 76期 (2008/6)

Page 4: Green Roofs

2006 美國已完工的

綠屋頂 ( 平方米 )

Page 5: Green Roofs
Page 6: Green Roofs
Page 7: Green Roofs
Page 8: Green Roofs
Page 9: Green Roofs

About Green Roofs

• A green roof system is an extension of the existing roof which involves a high quality water proofing and root repellant 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 of the system 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'.  Green roofs can provide a wide range of public and private benefits.

Page 10: Green Roofs

Principal Green Roof Technology Components Source: National Research Council, Institute for Research in Construction

http://www.greenroofs.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=26&Itemid=40

Page 11: Green Roofs
Page 12: Green Roofs
Page 13: Green Roofs
Page 14: Green Roofs
Page 15: Green Roofs
Page 16: Green Roofs

Two types of green roofs

• Extensive green roofs range from one to five inches in soil depth, normally consist of mosses, herbs and grasses, and are built primarily for their environmental benefits rather than public access.

• Intensive green roofs require at least a foot of soil depth, an elaborate irrigation and drainage system, and require maintenance. Intensive green roofs contain trees and shrubs and are typically designed to be publicly accessible.

Page 17: Green Roofs

Green roofs differ from a rooftop garden or a container garden

• because green roofs are an extension of the actual roof.

• This “extension” is created by using – a specially designed root repelling membrane– a drainage system– a lightweight growing medium, – and plants appropriate for the size and depth

of the green roof.

Page 18: Green Roofs

Some of the benefits green roofs provide

• include – storm water management (through

retention/filtration), – water and air quality improvement, – SMOG reduction– increased life expectancy of roof membranes– noise reduction– increased energy efficiency– and biodiversity preservation.

Page 19: Green Roofs
Page 20: Green Roofs
Page 21: Green Roofs
Page 22: Green Roofs
Page 23: Green Roofs
Page 24: Green Roofs

Green roof implementation has been growing

• Green roof implementation has been growing across Europe since the 1980s. Stimulated largely by state grants and municipal planning policies, countries such as Germany now benefit from over 10 million square metres of greened roof space.

• Although leaks have been a fear and sometimes a deterrent for developers considering a green roof – this is a misperception. Improved green roof technology has produced reliable products such as waterproof membranes and root-repelling agents, which prevent roots from penetrating the roof deck

Page 25: Green Roofs

Greenhouse on roof is greenroof ?

Page 26: Green Roofs
Page 27: Green Roofs

Garden Shed - Raleigh, NC

Page 28: Green Roofs
Page 29: Green Roofs
Page 30: Green Roofs
Page 31: Green Roofs
Page 32: Green Roofs
Page 33: Green Roofs
Page 34: Green Roofs
Page 35: Green Roofs
Page 36: Green Roofs
Page 37: Green Roofs
Page 38: Green Roofs
Page 39: Green Roofs
Page 40: Green Roofs
Page 41: Green Roofs
Page 42: Green Roofs
Page 43: Green Roofs
Page 44: Green Roofs
Page 45: Green Roofs
Page 46: Green Roofs
Page 47: Green Roofs
Page 48: Green Roofs
Page 49: Green Roofs

http://www.asla.org/land/050205/greenroofcentral.html

Page 50: Green Roofs
Page 51: Green Roofs
Page 52: Green Roofs
Page 53: Green Roofs
Page 54: Green Roofs
Page 55: Green Roofs
Page 56: Green Roofs
Page 57: Green Roofs
Page 58: Green Roofs
Page 59: Green Roofs
Page 60: Green Roofs
Page 61: Green Roofs
Page 62: Green Roofs
Page 63: Green Roofs
Page 64: Green Roofs
Page 65: Green Roofs
Page 66: Green Roofs
Page 67: Green Roofs
Page 68: Green Roofs
Page 69: Green Roofs
Page 70: Green Roofs
Page 71: Green Roofs
Page 72: Green Roofs
Page 73: Green Roofs
Page 74: Green Roofs
Page 75: Green Roofs
Page 76: Green Roofs
Page 79: Green Roofs

Green Roof links• Building Biology and Ecology Institute (NZ) • Building Biology Australia • Centre for Green Roof Research (Penn, US) • Committee members only • Eco Media • Fytogreen Australia• Green Building Council of Australia • Green Roofs For Healthy Cities - US • Green Roofs US industry link • Healthy Buildings Australia • International Journal of Building and Environment • Restless Treehouse • Sustainable Cities Network • Sustainable insight bookstor • Sustainable Melbourne • Urban Design Forum • Victorian Eco-Innovation Lab• http://www.greenroofs.org/• http://www.urbanag.org.au/Greenroofs_Australia.html

• GREEN ROOFS AUSTRALIA (GRA)• • GRA HOME • GRA COMMITTEE SITE • GRA MEMBERS NEWSLETTER

Page 80: Green Roofs

Green Walls

Page 81: Green Roofs