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Study calls for research and policies to support ‘green’ roofs and walls

Man on ladder examines plants

Image: College of Architecture

To facilitate the proliferation of green roofs and walls throughout North America, Texas A&M researchers have called for the development of standards and guidelines to improve research, policy development and management within the industry.

The findings come from a comprehensive and award-winning review of scholarly literature on green roofs and walls undertaken by Bruce Dvorak, Texas A&M associate professor of landscape architecture, and Astrid Volder, a former associate professor of horticultural landscape ecology at Texas A&M, who is now an assistant professor of plant sciences at the University of California, Davis. The review earned a 2017 Living Architecture Award of Excellence for Research from Green Roofs for Healthy Cities, a non-profit industry advocacy group.

Green roofs and green walls are vegetated building surfaces that promise numerous benefits to urban areas, such as reducing a building’s energy use, cleansing storm water and improving air quality, and providing aesthetic benefits and higher property values.

Some cities have built green roof pilot projects, adopted incentives for using green roofs or even require their use, said Dvorak, who has conducted interdisciplinary green roof and green wall research atop building A of the Langford Architecture Center since 2009.

“Although they’ve been popular across Europe for the past few decades, there is much to be learned regarding which plants favor rooftop environments in North America’s diverse ecological regions,” said Dvorak.

The literature review puts forth a broad, large-scale vision for making North American green roofs more bio-diverse and more regionally appropriate.

To investigate which plants have been tried in North American green roof projects and the ecological implications of those attempts, Dvorak and Volder reviewed green roof research papers published in peer-reviewed journals or presented in refereed conferences.

Because few of the projects reviewed employed widely accepted benchmarks set by the Association of Standards and Testing Materials or those of a well-known German landscape research society, the researchers found that many project results are difficult to interpret and less helpful in building a larger body of knowledge than they could be.

In concluding their review, Dvorak and Volder recommended that green roof investigations follow ASTM or other established benchmarks and that additional green roof investigations take place in North America’s several hundred ecoregions.

“Post-construction evaluations and results of North American green roof projects could help accelerate knowledge of field performance and strengthen project guideline and policy development,” said Dvorak, whose research interests also include sustainable design, planning and construction.