InnovatingSMART

THE INNOVATION:

Redesigning architecture to be greener through the use of new shear wall construction technology which can support habitat for flora and fauna.

 

Nelson Hyde Chick, CEO

www.vertlandscape.com

 

Watch an Introductory Video:

 


Listen to the Podcast:

 

Excerpts:

 

Θ  [It's about] Quality of life.  Greener people are happier.

 

Θ  I love nature and I’m always kind of saddened that urbanization has to take … you build a structure and there goes nature.  And I’d say: “Why can’t you have a composite of both?” … So what I’ve done is design a load-bearing shear wall system that in addition to bearing loads can sustain vegetation ….

 

Θ  Heat island effect.  It’s a major component of global warming.  Think of cities as kind of big bubbles of heat.  Now … we reduce that [heat] by increasing vegetation in the city.

 

Θ  Most technology now takes jobs away from people.  You start building with my product, I can actually make more jobs.

 

Θ  There’s a guy named Patrick Blanc, and he does a thing called Vertical Gardens – and they’re beautiful things … he can go into existing walls … but, he only uses plants that can grow aeroponically … but, his palette of vegetation is very limited….  But what I’ve tried to do is make a wall that can grow anything.  I can grow a wall of trees if I wanted to.

 

Θ  I think I can go fifty stories [high] with this.

 

Θ  Unless you’re above a green roof you can’t see it. … Vertical landscaping … you can have it framing your entrance.  You have it right there for people to see.

 

Θ  By where you orient the wall to the sun you can create microclimates. … A greenhouse put on its end.

 

Θ  We are a part of nature and we’ve got to start living with it instead of trying to extinguish it thinking it’s something we’re apart [from], we’re not.  The sooner we get closer to that than we are now, the better off we’ll be.

 

Θ  Almost every major city in the world is settled on some of the most prime arable land there was … we have lost so much really good arable land [to] urbanization.  The thing is - arable land isn’t just about the soil – it’s about where it’s located: the climate and whatnot.  That's why I think if all buildings start sprouting vertical landscaping we could get that arable land back.

 

Θ  We’ve got a lot to learn from nature.

 

Θ  In a way a building is a kind of a living organism now.  You consider the people and their lives and how [a vertical landscape] will just make it more living, more in tune with nature.  I think it would just benefit society and the individual.

 

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Sue Lebeck 

  Cool Block Platform Director

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