1. Bosco Verticale
This rendering by architect Stefano Boeri features the first urban vertical forest, Bosco Verticale in Milan.
The pair of apartment skyscrapers are built to sustain the equivalent of 2.5 acres of forest extending towards the sky.
The soon-to-be-completed towers feature cantilevered balconies, wind and solar systems, and greywater recycling systems that irrigate the 5,000 shrubs, 480 big and medium size trees, 250 small size trees, and 11,000 ground-cover plants chosen for the project.
2. The “Tower Flower”
The “Tower Flower,” designed and built by architect Edouard Francois in Paris’s 17th arrondissement, contains 380 giant concrete flower pots embedded in each of the apartment building’s balconies.
4. The Stairscraper: “A Desert Green”
The “Stairscraper” was a winning design by Barcelona-based architect Nabito in theTotal Housing Competition. The “horizontal landscape city,” reportedly scheduled for completion in Abu Dhabi in 2015, will allow each apartment to have its own balcony and roof garden.
5. Living Wall at the Birmingham NEC
This wall at the LG Arena in Birmingham features a “compost modular system” built into a steel sub structure. Check out the full project gallery created by the UK’s “preeminent supplier of Living Walls.”
6. Living Wall at Westfield Shopping Centre
This living wall in Shepherds Bush is the largest “Living Wall” in Europe. It features a fully automatic zoned irrigation and rainwater harvesting system.
7. Cascading Water Garden
A private London residence designed by Biotecture Ltd. and maintained by Scotscape
8. Edgware Road Installation
This living wall at Edgware Road tube station is an experimental installation measuring how efficiently such walls reduce PM10s (particulate matter) from the atmosphere, which is a respiratory hazard.
10. Phyto Universe
The Phyto Universe hair-care center on Lexington Avenue was New York’s first vertical garden. Created in 2006 by Patrick Blanc, a scientist from the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and Engineer Laurent Corradi, the garden covers 2,900 square feet and includes 9,000 species.
11. Le Mur Vegetal at the Musée du quai Branly
Le Mur Vegetal (or “Vertical Garden”) by Patrick Blanc in Paris. Blanc is known as the father of the vertical garden, through which he combines artistry and botany to accomplish astonishing transformations of urban spaces.
13. Madrid Caixa Forum
This Patrick Blanc-designed vertical garden on an exterior wall of a former power station features 15,000 plants and 250 different species.
14. Living Walls in the Netherlands
These living walls (also designed by Patrick Blanc) are covered in felt and rock wool, which helps irrigate the embedded plant life.
15. Recycled Bottle Herb Garden
Recycled bottles filled with soil and herbs provide a functional herb garden at a family home in Sao Paulo.
Designed by Rosenbaum.
17. Modular Tetris Garden
Modular garden tiles produced by Spanish company Ceracasa can be configured in an infinite number of patterns.
21. An Alternative “Greenhouse”
Unlike traditional “greenhouses,” these houses are covered by (rather than filled with) plant life.
A contemporary private residence was designed by the Belgian architects Samyn and Partners and their botanical specialist, Patrick White.
23. “Green Cast” Plantered Façade
This Japanese structure designed by Kengo Kuma and Associates is covered in slanted planters made out of aluminum cast from decayed styrene foam.
24. Villa Cascais
A vertical garden designed by landscape architecture firm Proap at a villa in Lisbon, Portugal.
26. Singaporean Office Garden
An award-winning interior garden created by Tierra Design / POD for a building in Singapore’s Central Business District.
34. Ascending Hotel Horticulture
Designed by the Canadian firm Green Over Grey Living Walls and Design
35. San Vicente de Raspeig Children’s Library
Designed by architect Jose Maria Chofre
36. “Gardens by the Bay”
Created by Wilkinson Eyre Architects for the National Parks Board of Singapore
37. The “Urban Cactus”
The Urban Cactus is an architectural project in Rotterdam created by UCX Architects, and includes 98 residential units on 19 floors with staggered balcony gardens.
39. Gravity-Defying Bike Path
An exterior wall at a restaurant in Mexico City.
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