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Posts tagged green wall
Vertical Garden in Jamieson Place Calgary, Alberta
Apr 12th
Greenery Office Interiors is owned by a Calgarian, Joanne Young, who recently installed the largest living wall in Western Canada in Jamieson Place. They used a pre-planted modular vertical gardening system to create two walls inside the building. The living walls get natural light via huge skylights in the ceiling and are drip fed on a timed irrigation system. The small wall is 750 sq ft and the large wall is 1200 sq ft… there are over 20,000 plants in 20 different varieties!
I love the way they’re collecting the water from the irrigation system. They have dark stones setup above a grate so the water trickles through the vertical garden and into the reservoir while hiding the grate itself. It gives a great, natural look. Global TV’s Gil Tucker did an interview that you can see here.
They used McRae’s Modular Greenwall System which includes a special growing foam, a powder coated metal grid and a waterproof backing. Each grid can be either pregrown or planted in place. You don’t need to clean the dirt off the plants.. just stuff the plants into the foam right from 3″ pots. The roots can easily spread in the foam and it gives the right combination of air and water to help the plants grow. You can see a diagram of the system at the bottom of this post.
Constructing a Vertical Garden Patrick Blanc Style
Apr 8th
San Diego landscape designers Amelia B. Lima and Ricardo Marinho created this Patrick Blanc style vertical garden.
The location was a long, skinny yard – 40 ft by 17 ft wide. The dining room and kitchen looked right onto a block wall surrounding the property and Amelia’s goal was to create a living wall to bring a more natural look to the backyard. The result was a 260 square foot vertical garden using epiphytes and lithophytes (plants that usually grow without much soil, like on rocks)
Galvanized steel makes the frame. They’re set in place with concrete footings. Next, marine plywood and corrugated plastic are attached to the frame. Amelia then stapled on two layers of synthetic felt to the plastic and then cut slits in the first layer. The plants nestle between the layers of felt and which helps to evenly distribute the water across the wall from the drip irrigation system at the top.
A water channel underneath the gravel pumps the water to the wall and collects the extra water to be used again later. Via Lushe














