Vertical Greenery Systems (VGS) are relatively light structures anchored on building facades with plants embedded on felt layers and nurtured by a hydroponic watering system. These systems can have positive effects on environmental performance at both the building scale (i.e. energy saving for cooling) and the urban scale (i.e. urban heat island effect mitigation). A research project, namely GREENED, has been developed for detecting the environmental profile of VGS based on lifecycle processes. Systemic indicators, such as Carbon Footprint (given in kg CO2-eq) and eMergy (given in solar emergy Joules – seJ), can provide information on environmental impacts or costs, due to the manufacturing and sustenance of VGS, and benefits, in terms of energy saving or other ecosystems services (e.g. CO2 sequestration by plants). The cost to benefit ratio allows for a comprehensive evaluation of VGS sustainability. Outcomes from a case study (i.e. 98m facade on a 1000m3 building) reveal that, in 2 3 given conditions (i.e. massive wall envelope, south-oriented facade, open air-cavity, integrated water harvesting system, local recourse use), environmental costs can be compensated by benefits within 25 years. This allowed for a deeper understanding of lifecycle processes and the conscious use of VGS in an urban context. © 2014 WIT Press.

A comprehensive lifecycle evaluation of vertical greenery systems based on systemic indicators

Pulselli, R. M.
;
2014-01-01

Abstract

Vertical Greenery Systems (VGS) are relatively light structures anchored on building facades with plants embedded on felt layers and nurtured by a hydroponic watering system. These systems can have positive effects on environmental performance at both the building scale (i.e. energy saving for cooling) and the urban scale (i.e. urban heat island effect mitigation). A research project, namely GREENED, has been developed for detecting the environmental profile of VGS based on lifecycle processes. Systemic indicators, such as Carbon Footprint (given in kg CO2-eq) and eMergy (given in solar emergy Joules – seJ), can provide information on environmental impacts or costs, due to the manufacturing and sustenance of VGS, and benefits, in terms of energy saving or other ecosystems services (e.g. CO2 sequestration by plants). The cost to benefit ratio allows for a comprehensive evaluation of VGS sustainability. Outcomes from a case study (i.e. 98m facade on a 1000m3 building) reveal that, in 2 3 given conditions (i.e. massive wall envelope, south-oriented facade, open air-cavity, integrated water harvesting system, local recourse use), environmental costs can be compensated by benefits within 25 years. This allowed for a deeper understanding of lifecycle processes and the conscious use of VGS in an urban context. © 2014 WIT Press.
2014
9781784660246
Carbon footprint
EMergy evaluation
Global warming
Living walls
Sustainability
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12318/135236
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