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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsGreening of high rise buildings - very creative urban architecture in Milan.
In densely populated cities, finding a patch of green can be a challenge. But by the end of this year in Milan, all residents will have to do is look up. Way up.
http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/milan-architects-build-vertical-forest-apartment-towers-a-886153.html
"The Vertical Forest, two towers currently under construction in Italy's second-largest city, won't be the modern standard of urban housing, characterized by concrete, steel and glass. Instead, the residential buildings in the central Isola district will be covered in vegetation -- 730 trees, 5,000 shrubs and 11,000 plants, to be exact.
Bosco Verticale, as the 65 million ($85 million) project is called in Italian, will be the world's "first example" of a vertical forest, according to Stefano Boeri, Gianandrea Barreca, and Giovanni La Varra, the architects who designed the project for the firm Boeri Studio.
In addition to being pleasant to behold, the two towers will help purify the city air, increase bio-diversity and protect residents from the sun and noise pollution, they say. At 80 meters and 112 meters (262 feet and 367 feet) tall, they are also an "anti-sprawl measure." According to Boeri Studio, the vegetation on the buildings will be equal to a hectare of forest, serving as an "ecology billboard."
Tree-planting recently began on the structures, but not before the architects spent some two years working with botanists to determine which varieties and sizes would best suit their purpose. Once the project is finished later this year, they will be watered mainly with gray water produced by residents, and tree care will be managed by building staff at the towers, which are part of a larger urban renewal and development project called Porta Nuova.
surrealAmerican
(11,368 posts)I wonder how well they will maintain it twenty or thirty years from now, and whether the roots can be kept from growing in directions that would damage the building.
Victor_c3
(3,557 posts)Imagine living in a city filled with buildings like this? That'd be awesome.
I also love how they plan to use grey water produced by the building to water the plants.
Divernan
(15,480 posts)Given the predicted water wars in the not too distant future, these buildings would be a godsend to maintaining trees/plants in the cities. I'd like to able to convert my house to use grey water for my plants and flowers.