Going Green

Nov. 25, 2009:Making a Case for Green
Nov. 18, 2009:Calculating the Toll your Business Takes
Nov. 09, 2009:Canada Highly Rated in Improving Energy Efficiency
Oct. 23, 2009:Landlords & Tenants Become Allies To Save Energy
Sep. 24, 2009:ESRI Canada Strengthens Its Commitment to the Environment with New Green Roof
Sep. 01, 2009:White roof helps Polaris Realty go LEED-EB
Aug. 24, 2009:Toronto MINI dealership going for green
Aug. 10, 2009:First Canadian Place: Chilling Energy Use - Equipment Upgrade
Jul. 16, 2009:Wal-Mart To Become Green Umpire
Jul. 06, 2009:AECL's future in doubt as Ontario suspends nuclear power plans
Jun. 19, 2009:Commute-free employees save money, environment
Jun. 05, 2009:Canada Green Building Council pilot project teaches valuable lessons
May 20, 2009:International green certification option catching on in Canada
May 04, 2009:Tim Hortons Inc. Building $30-Million Coffee Roasting Facility in Hamilton, Ontario
Apr. 24, 2009:Go green on top, or face $100,000 fine, city proposes
Mar. 31, 2009:RREEF Report: Recession Fails to Diminish Demand for Green Real Estate
Mar. 20, 2009:FLAP number of recorded collisions soars to over 43,000 birds from 162 species.
Mar. 09, 2009:Municipalities' group to vote on restricting bottled-water sales
Feb. 23, 2009:Universities' ivory towers going green
Jan. 23, 2009:Wal-Mart Canada opens first environmental demonstration store
Jan. 16, 2009:INDUSTRIAL CHIC: Toronto Streetcar repair sheds get an enviro-friendly makeover
Jan. 16, 2009:Amidst Deepening Recession, Green Fights Back
Dec. 16, 2008:Apartments, condos to get green bins
Dec. 16, 2008:Cadillac Fairview Properties Across Canada Achieve BOMA BESt Green Building Certification
Nov. 26, 2008:Go Green with BOMA Canada's New Certification
Nov. 18, 2008:A building with an energy all its own
Nov. 18, 2008:LEED for Existing Buildings helps owners compete in tough market
Oct. 31, 2008:'Rewards for Recycling' Program to divert 90 truckloads of material from landfill
Oct. 09, 2008:Greening your Commercial Space
Oct. 09, 2008:Oxford calculates its carbon footprint
Sep. 22, 2008:Helping green rise to the top
Sep. 10, 2008:LEED Building Basics
Sep. 03, 2008:Royal Architectural Institute of Canada launches wiki on carbon-neutral building
Sep. 03, 2008:$45 Trillion Needed to Combat Global Warming
Sep. 03, 2008:Ontario Smart Grid Forum Launched
Sep. 03, 2008:Canada Enters Carbon Exchange Market
Aug. 01, 2008:Calculate your Carbon Footprint
 

Helping green rise to the top

Sep. 22, 2008

Source: Cristina da Silva, Special to The Star, Toronto Star, Sept 20

Green has hit the condominium roof. Although the greening of roofs is relatively new in Canada, Toronto is the country's leader in green roofs.

In fact, the city claimed the Canadian top spot in 2007 for the most green roof space added in a year (more than 7,700 square-metres).

Environment Canada's 2002 Green Roof report estimated that greening 6 per cent of Toronto's rooftops – about 6.5 million square metres or 1 per cent of the city's land area – would reduce the city's summer air temperatures by one to two degrees Celsius.

Shortly after this report, the City of Toronto adopted green roofs as part of its strategy to fight pollution, reduce summer temperatures and minimize storm water runoff.

Not all green roofs are created equal. They differ in soil depth, plant species and cost.

The intensive system, with deep growing medium, is the most expensive but also the most attractive because it supports trees, shrubs and perennials.

The extensive system, with shallow growing medium, usually supports only sedums and mosses. However, what extensive systems lack in plant diversity, they make up for in lightness, low maintenance and lower cost.

Semi-intensive systems are somewhere in the middle in soil depth and plant species.

In the last couple years, more developers have started to contemplate "green roofs" for their new residential highrises.

When Concert Properties started building their condo-style, 28-storey Jazz rental residences on 167 Church St., they contacted Xero Flor Canada.

Xero Flor's chief operating officer, Sasha Aguilera, vividly remembers installing the two 150-square-metre extensive green roofs on the eighth floor on Nov. 29, 2005.

"It was a very cold day, it was even snowing some," she recalls.

Xero Flor's extensive system includes a waterproof membrane, followed by a root barrier, a drainage layer, water retention fabric and then finally the layer that contains the high mineral content media with eight to 12 different sedum species.

The sedum species and the thin layer of media are grown for a year and half on a farm in Princeton, Ont., between Paris and Woodstock.

"We put our vegetation carrier on this protective film and we fill that with two centimetres of soil and the seeds go in there as well," says Aguilera.

"When it's ready, we just basically start to roll it up since it's not attached to the ground."

The rolled-up sedums with media are whisked away to the building site on pallets.

Over the last five years Xero Flor has installed 16 green roofs on residential highrises. Although relatively new to Canada, their system has been used on rooftops in Germany for more than 30 years.

It's unlikely the condo board would allow an individual to set up a green roof on their balcony or terrace.

So, what information can a sole condo gardener glean from green roofs for their own growing space?

Plants. If you have a windy, hot site, green roof plants would probably grow by leaps and bounds. Sedums flourish; useful species include S. acre, S. album, S. floriferum and S. spurium.

Indigenous plants suggested by the city include junipers, spireas, sand cherry, a variety of sedges, asters, penstemons and bergamot.

For an extensive list of green roof plants, pick up Green Roof Plants: A Resource and a Planting Guide by Edmund C. Snodgrass and Lucie L. Snodgrass (Timber Press, 2006 $22.40).

Cristina da Silva will be conducting a condo gardening seminar on Saturday, Oct. 4, at 3:30 p.m. at the Toronto Condo Show. More information at torontocondoshow.com.

Cristina da Silva is a garden writer and designer. Email her at cristinadasilva@ rogers.com.