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Why Rooftop Gardens?
Click here to check out the High Line Project, another creative use of urban space. |
Chicago The City of Chicago leads the nation in installing green roofs. In the center of downtown Chicago lies an oasis of green. In 2000, Mayor Richard Daley had a green roof installed. Consisting mostly of prairie plants native to the Chicago area, the garden includes 20,000 plants of more than 100 species, including shrubs, vines and two trees. When the roof was installed, it was an oddity. Today in Chicago more than 200 green roofs have been constructed or are under way - the most in any American city. Now other cities, hoping to cool and clean their air and help with storm drainage, are beginning to emulate Chicago. . .
"You look down on the prime real estate areas of this country - downtown Chicago, Manhattan - and so much is unutilized, all these rooftops," says Sadhu Johnston, Chicago's environment commissioner. In Chicago green rooftops sit atop the Apple store, a Target, and a McDonald's. Even Chicago's Wal-Mart will soon have one - the company's first. The idea is simple: bring back some of the organic material displaced by buildings, streets, and parking lots. Advocates tout benefits that range from reducing the urban "heat island" effect - which makes cities several degrees warmer than surrounding areas and can translate into millions of dollars in energy costs - to lengthening the life span of a roof, providing community garden or recreation space, and contributing to a building's energy efficiency. |
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