Low Impact Living: Green Walls — Don't Stop Greening On The Roof!

Green Herb WallGreen roofs are great – they’re very energy efficient, they capture and filter stormwater, they reduce the urban heat island effect, and they soften the harsh grays and blacks of our cities (at least from above!). We’ve written at length in the past about these benefits. If it works so well on roofs, why stop there?

That’s exactly what the firm Green Living Technologies thought when they developed their Green Living Walls system, which is based on designs they developed for sloped roofs. They’ve developed a modular green wall system that can be used to create anything from a small herb wall in your kitchen to a full facade of an office building and anything in bewteen. You can pick from a huge range of plants suitable to your climate, and you can also choose to grow the plants onsite once the wall is installed or have them delivered pre-grown so that your wall is green from day one.

A green wallThe set of benefits is slightly different from those of green roofs. Because they are vertical, you can’t capture and filter as much stormwater through them as you could a green roof (although with certain configurations you can route water from the roof through a wall system). Also, you don’t get quite as much insulation bang for your buck since since in most buildings more energy is lost or gained per square foot through the roof than through the walls. However, a well-designed green wall on the south side of a building will reduce cooling demands and increase comfort in the summer.

There are some significant benefits over green roofs. Fruits and vegetables can be grown in GLT’s Green Living Walls, and you don’t have to have access to the roof to care for or harvest them.

Also, think about the benefits in our cities if green walls were more widespread. Green spaces wouldn’t be limited to just rooftops, parks or streetside planting areas, and would instead hide or replace the concrete and glass of buildings. Streets would be cooler. Vegetables could be grown in urban spaces that currently sit unused, reducing the impacts of shipping food in from far away. And at least in a small way cities could begin to sequester some of the carbon they generate.

So, the next time you’re thinking about replacing a wall at home or redoing an internal or external wall where you work, make sure to throw a green one into the mix!

SUNY GENESEO PROFESSOR WILLIAM R. COOK NAMED RUNNER-UP FOR PRESTIGIOUS TEACHING AWARD

US Fed News Service, Including US State News February 7, 2006 The State University of New York at Geneseo issued the following news release:

Just hours after the State University of New York at Geneseo’s Distinguished Teaching Professor of History William R. Cook received word he was the runner-up for Baylor University’s 2006 Robert Foster Cherry Award for Great Teaching, he phoned the recipient to offer his congratulations.

He found Anton E. Armstrong, Tosdal Professor of Music at St. Olaf College in Northfield, Minn., busily preparing for a performance, which immediately endeared him to Cook. After all, Armstrong was hard at work-precisely the place Cook likes to be “I asked Anton if I was interrupting his celebration since he had been informed about two hours earlier that he was the winner,” said Cook. “He said that he had told no one and that he was hard at work proofreading the program for a concert the next night.” This is quintessential Cook-deflecting his own kudos for being the alternate-and one of only three finalists-for the award out of a field of 86 nominations representing 68 colleges and universities, and 46 disciplines. this web site livingston county news

Then Cook mentioned how great his achievement is for Geneseo. He is the first professor from a public liberal arts college-as opposed to larger, public universities-to be up for the award.

“I think it speaks well not just for me but for Geneseo,” said Cook. “It puts Geneseo in the forefront of public liberal arts colleges. It’s another place we got our ‘first.’” The Cherry Award honors outstanding professors in the English-speaking world who are distinguished for their ability to communicate as classroom teachers. Nominees must have proven track records as extraordinary teachers with positive, inspiring and long-lasting effects on students, along with records of distinguished scholarship.

Having a Geneseo faculty member nominated for such a prestigious award will make a big impact on continuing to attract excellent teachers to the college’s faculty, said Cook, whose nomination resulted in a personal award of $15,000 and $10,000 for the history department to foster the development of teaching skills.

The other finalist was Robert W. Brown, Institute Professor of Physics at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland.

It has been a busy year for Cook, who concentrates on medieval history and has focused much of his research on St. Francis of Assisi. Last May, he was named a finalist for the award. In October, he visited Baylor to deliver a lecture. Then, in November, he repeated that lecture for a Geneseo audience. this web site livingston county news

Aside from the commitments associated with the Cherry Award, Cook has managed to accomplish interesting work in between teaching at Geneseo. After speaking at Baylor, he flew to Italy for a three-day visit and to speak to Friends of Florence, a group who restore works of art in Florence. During the winter break, he spent nine days in Washington, D.C., taping a 24-video course tentatively titled Machiavelli in Context for The Teaching Company. And during spring break, Cook will put his French to use when he travels to Morocco to conduct course research on how democracy has penetrated a traditional Islamic society. While he’s there, he’ll ride a camel, too.

“I figure as long as you keep moving, they can’t catch you,” laughed Cook, who joined the Geneseo faculty in 1970 as an assistant professor of history and in 1984, at the age of 40, was named a Distinguished Teaching Professor.

He received his bachelor’s degree from Wabash College in Crawfordsville, Ind., and his master’s degree and doctorate from Cornell University in Ithaca, N.Y.

Cook has made an impact on the community in other ways. He is a columnist for the Livingston County News and a member of the board of contributors of the Rochester, N.Y., Democrat and Chronicle. And in 1998, he made an unsuccessful bid for U.S. Congress. The morning after Election Day, he sent his substitute teacher home and returned to the classroom-where he belongs.Contact: Mary E. McCrank, 585/245-5516, mccrank@geneseo.edu.

Mary E. McCrank, 585/245-5516, mccrank@geneseo.edu.

 

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Comments

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  3. Lael Giebel says:

    Does this work in the south, where mold is such an issue? I would worry that moisture could get through to the interior walls?

  4. Lael Giebel says:

    Does this work in the south, where mold is such an issue? I would worry that moisture could get through to the interior walls?

  5. Sharon says:

    I think the entire idea is phenominal
    Unfortunately it is not for everyone, but moving forward with new construction, this should always be pitched as an option.
    Personally I love where the homes are recycling the water and heating it underground. Talk about keeping down your bills
    There is so much we can do to save the earth, but most are afraid of change

  6. Sharon says:

    I think the entire idea is phenominal
    Unfortunately it is not for everyone, but moving forward with new construction, this should always be pitched as an option.
    Personally I love where the homes are recycling the water and heating it underground. Talk about keeping down your bills
    There is so much we can do to save the earth, but most are afraid of change

  7. As with a vegetated roof, having a watertight assembly is an important part of a successful installation. A root barrier, to prevent plant roots from penetrating the wall system would also be needed.

    If the wall doesn’t keep the water out, it’s not working; so that always needs to be addressed, whether it’s a vegetated wall or not.

    A vegetated wall would tend to reduce the amount of windblown water getting into the wall, since the leaves and limbs of the plants act as a screen.

  8. As with a vegetated roof, having a watertight assembly is an important part of a successful installation. A root barrier, to prevent plant roots from penetrating the wall system would also be needed.

    If the wall doesn’t keep the water out, it’s not working; so that always needs to be addressed, whether it’s a vegetated wall or not.

    A vegetated wall would tend to reduce the amount of windblown water getting into the wall, since the leaves and limbs of the plants act as a screen.

  9. Julia Thieriot says:

    Please tell me who to contact in Winchester or Culpeper, VA that can build this work.
    Thank you

  10. Julia Thieriot says:

    Please tell me who to contact in Winchester or Culpeper, VA that can build this work.
    Thank you

  11. buy vaniqa says:

    I’m glad to have found this post as its such an interesting one! I am always on the lookout for quality posts and articles so i suppose im lucky to have found this! I hope you will be adding more in the future…

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