Friday, March 27, 2009

Greening Your House

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Some ideas from the New York Times including, of course, green roofs.

Photo from the New York Times by Michelle Litvin.

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Put up a Parking Lot

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From the firm of Wolfgang Oehme and James Van Sweden, known for their use of grasses and perennials, often natives, a garden on the roof of the Federal Reserve Parking lot in Washington, DC. The 30-year-old garden was recently renovated. No information on whether stimulus money was used.

Photo by Roger Foley from the Oehme, Van Sweden website. More photos here.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Derry and Tom's

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The former Derry and Tom's department store on Kensington High Street in London has one of the oldest and most original planted roofs in London. Built in the 1930s, the roof garden contains three theme gardens covering 1.5 acres: the Spanish, Tudor, and English Woodland. Plantings are hugely varied, including fully grown deciduous and evergreen trees and shrubs--including oaks, sycamores, maples and and palm trees, many perennials and shrubs, spring bulbs, arched passageways modelled on The Alahmbra, and resident ducks and flamingos. The original roof was planted on a metre of soil over a drainage layer.

The gardens are now part of a private club and restaurant owned by Virgin. More photos
here.

Photo from Open Garden Squares.

Friday, March 6, 2009

Garden Show Green Wall

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The Seattle Flower & Garden Show had its fair share of green roofs this year, some more successful than others in terms of impact. In terms of whether any of them could survive as green roofs out in the elements, I'm not so sure. But garden shows aren't reality shows, are they?

First up, the Gold Medal winner 'The Sky's the Limit' created by New York designer
Rebecca Cole for Smith & Hawken. Greenery on the walls, on the roof (where the pampas grass would probably pretty quickly interfere with the solar panels), and even on the tabletop (a table built with a gambion-style base filled with cut logs, by the way). The installation was done by Seattle-based Brent Bissell. The wall display shown here was grown by T&L Nurseries in Weston grids.

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Cole's mission statement:

As our cities become more populated, space becomes more limited, and our desire to be more “green” flourishes, the ROOF emerges as the greener pasture for a gardening revolution. Maximizing the limited space for living, gardening, and venting, this high rise roof top garden, 20 stories up, merges indoor/outdoor living, el fresco dining and energy saving building technologies with a passion for sustainable gardening.Capturing the beauty of the mountains of New Hampshire where I grew up, Thailand where I love to visit and New York City where I live, this garden combines wind-resistant trees, hardy bamboo, drought tolerant grasses and succulents to reinvent the urban jungle. When every precious inch counts even the picnic table needs to be reinvented!!!