This has to take the cake…
An office building in Portland Or. that is planning to have an entire wall built as a vertical garden. We first heard about this when one of our friends sent us a recent NYT article - “In Portland, Growing Vertical”

Now the truth is - I am not a green wall expert. (I bet no one is….) But I can say a few things off the top - (or side as the case may be…). Green Building is an important notion. Energy Efficiency as we all recognize is clearly a vastly under utilized tool in the fight against climate change. Stopping the waste of energy and doing so in an economically responsible manor is a major goal of the Green building movement. In our opinion - extreme - edge concepts are not helpful. In fact they can have negative impacts never imagined by the folks (generally of good intent…) who start and promote them. I am not sure of the cost for the green wall - or the up keep - but it will be far more then a conventional wall. I am not sure how many homes in Portland could be put through a serious energy efficiency upgrade - for the same federal money - 5,000, 10,000 a lot. I wonder what the actual energy cost savings is of the green wall vs alternative projects - homes or commercial energy retrofits.
It is hard enough to keep a horizonta lgarden healthy. A wall on a large office building is not a single season exercise - it is 30 years, 50 years or more…
As a long time supporter of Green Buildings and the green movement - this seems like a bad idea. And - especially if funded with tax payer money. Should a commercial developer want to build green walls - Go For It! But with tax dollars - please - no.









































The vertical garden design seems a bit far fetched to actually get off the ground.
Lushe
http://www.lushe.com.au
id say this is more about the architect than green design - its hard to know without the full environmental analysis
thanks - for comments - seems far fetched… and yes it should have a full (public) eir and economic alternatives study,,,,