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Urban Agriculture and Retrofit Green Roofs By: Liza Badaloo.

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Presentation on theme: "Urban Agriculture and Retrofit Green Roofs By: Liza Badaloo."— Presentation transcript:

1 Urban Agriculture and Retrofit Green Roofs By: Liza Badaloo

2 Aerial View of Site

3 Closer Aerial View of Site

4 401 Richmond St. West: History Previously the Macdonald Manufacturing Co. Known worldwide for quality metal lithographs Building was completed in 1923.

5 The Transformation 1994: from historic 200,000 square foot factory to affordable downtown workspace Most work done in 18 months

6 Philosophical Approaches "Old ideas can sometimes use new buildings; new ideas must use old buildings“ (Jacobs, 1961) vibrant mix of tenants commercial, cultural and community activities

7 Rooftop Garden Elements Began in 1995 “Retrofit” greenroof 6500 square ft cedar deck Large planters, 40 ft greenhouse, shaded pergola (with hanging baskets, trees and shrubs)

8 Rooftop Garden Continued….

9 Rooftop Garden Cont….

10 Rooftop Urban Agriculture Project Implemented in 2003 Planter boxes constructed from leftover plywood from the building workshop Some plants grown from seed in the greenhouse, some purchased from Foodshare’s rooftop garden Organic gardening methods were used

11 Urban Agriculture Project Cont…. Compost tumbler was used to provide fresh compost for plantar boxes, eliminating the need to hoist new soil onto the roof local peat moss was used to add bulk and structure to soil

12 Benefits: Warmth and Roof Protection The roof garden cedar deck provides an additional air pocket over part of the 3rd floor roof, which protects the roof membrane from freeze-thaw stretching, and provides a layer of winter insulation for the suites underneath Reduction in heating costs for the building

13 Benefits: Shade The roof garden deck and plants provide summer shade which serves to cool the suites that lie directly beneath Reduction in cooling costs for the building Reduces the urban heat island effect for the city, thus reducing cooling costs for the entire city

14 Benefits: Stormwater Retention and Air Pollution The trees and shrubs in the roof garden work to mitigate air pollution by trapping particulates and absorbing gaseous emissions that arise from the busy streets surrounding the building: increases air quality Plants trap and hold rainfall that prevents polluted stormwater runoff from leaving part of the building roof: reduces CSO occurrences

15 Benefits: Biodiversity The plants and flowers in the roof garden are selected, in part, for their ability to attract bees, butterflies, ladybugs, birds and other insects: increases insect and bird biodiversity

16 Benefits: Social Provides tenants and visitors with a peaceful oasis in the downtown core for eating, meetings, relaxing, etc. Trees and plants provide insulation from street noise as well as necessary shade

17 Benefits: Social Cont…. Residents can learn about organic gardening Increases awareness about the potential of rooftop urban agriculture

18 Benefits: Food! Peas, red cabbage, tomatoes, lettuce and many herbs are produced Over $1500 worth of produce was produced in the first year of the project Food used by the building café and donated to urban food security organizations

19 Improvement Considerations Primary Usages/Functions:  Open to the public (building code compliance, such as rails, occupancy, etc.)  Aesthetically pleasing  Available for urban agriculture  Increased stormwater retention  Decreased urban heat island effects  Increased biodiversity

20 Improvement Considerations Cont…. Building Structure Considerations:  Roof load capacity (could put more weight on columns, load-bearing walls, etc.)  Roof membrane  Drainage Cost  More costs in the first two years to establish plants

21 Improvement Considerations Cont…. Time  Can more time be devoted to maintenance during the first two years?  How much time can be devoted to ongoing maintenance?

22 Improvement Suggestion Replace large area of gravel by the greenhouse with extensive green roof elements such as hardy grasses, sedums, mosses, sempervivums, festucas, irises or wildflowers.

23 Currently….

24 With Suggested Improvement

25 HOW??

26 Why Extensive? This part of the roof: Is a large area Cannot support high loads Is not used by tenants/guests Extensive elements are: Comparatively inexpensive Comparatively low maintenance Do not require complex drainage systems

27 Improvement Benefits More stormwater retention More countering of the urban heat island effect More reductions in heating/cooling building costs More air pollution reductions More roof membrane protection More attractive than gravel! Increases awareness of extensive green roof techniques to a wide audience ***all the benefits of an extensive roof PLUS access!

28 Future of Green Roofs in Toronto? February 2006: Toronto City Council approved the Green Roofs Strategy which includes:  Installing green roofs on new and existing city buildings when possible  Offering financial incentives for retrofit green roofs  Generally recognizing the environmental, social and economic potential for green roofs in Toronto

29 Artists’ Rendition


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