How Green Can You Go?
Green roof manufacturers incorporate sustainable products beyond the greenery.
If it looks green, smells green and feels green, it must be green. Right? The answer, it turns out, is more of a maybe. It is common knowledge that green technology has large positive environmental impacts: large-scale energy savings, run-off reduction and heat reduction among their chief assets. But as green builders continue to define the standards and guidelines for sustainable construction practices, different levels of earth friendly products continue to circulate the market. Green roofs in particular are taking a harder look at the sustainability of their component materials.
Make it last
Brad Budde of Conwed Plastics, Minneapolis, Minn., believes the future development of sustainable green roof products lies in the hands of builders. He suggests that as companies continue to understand the commercial concerns regarding the application of sustainable and earth friendly products that the market as a whole will become more educated about their applications, benefits and uses.
His company is a leader of earth friendly, compostible packaging materials as an alternative to traditional plastic bags, as well as biodegradable plastics that don’t leave the harmful, long lasting resins of other industry plastics. “It’s a really great product that solves some of the disposal concerns for traditional plastic products,” he says.
One of Conwed’s most earth friendly products is its erosion control blanket netting. While not typically used in green roof applications, it is nonetheless a big step toward creating holistically green products.
“The temporary rolled erosion control products are meant to stabilize the ground until vegetation comes in and provides natural stabilization,” Budde says.
Jeff Stillman of ZinCo USA, Newton, Mass., says one of the keys to his company’s sustainable green roofing products is the use of non-rotting, recycled polypropylene. The substance’s long lasting capabilities and recycled nature make it a shoe-in for sustainable building material.
“It’s the fabric that we use for our protection mat and filter sheets,” Stillman says. “The mat is needle punched and usually made with a fleece backing composed of recycled polypropylene fibers.”
Top of the heap
Sustainable materials aren’t confined to the base level of green building projects. When it comes to the greenery on a green roof, plants come into play. Ed Snodgrass of Emory Knoll Farms, Maryland has provided plants for 268 roof projects, providing more than 2 million square feet of green roofing in the U.S. Snodgrass’s farm is in collaboration with several university research programs. The effort is producing a fund of knowledge about soil depths and plant types that create healthy, lasting and sustainable green roofing projects.
The Emory Knoll farm employs photovoltaic panels, bio-diesel engines and composting toilets all to save and create sustainable energy. All of the farm’s plants are chemical free.
“We try to produce as much energy as we can,” says Snodgrass. “So as we can afford to make capital improvements, we want part of that capital to go to energy production of some kind.”



i am interested in solar power for my cuntry.
Dear Staff:
I have a question, my company is a elastomer producer and we modified the asphalt for roofing applications as singles and membrane, and my question is:
the membranes are used for green roofing?
Regards,
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