Vertical forests lend greenery to concrete jungles. Click to read the full fact.
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Vertical forests lend greenery to concrete jungles. Click to read the full fact.
“Mount Tirana,” Tirana, Albania,
Cebra Architecture
The soft exhale of April light // Part 29
April 12th, 2022
Desde Blog Arte Plus: Bosque Vertical, edificios llenos de árboles.
[ Acceder ]
Bosco Verticale (Vertical Forest) in Milan, Italy.
Source: stefanoboeriarchitetti
Vertical Forest, in the black and white category.
(Photo by Arian Yousefi Javan/Kolari Vision)
Life In Another Light Photo Contest 2020
The buildings are set to have 350 trees and 14,000 shrubs of more than 100 different species
The Egyptian desert is set to host the African continent's first vertical forest.
Italian architect and urban planner Stefano Boeri has unveiled designs for three buildings covered with pollution-absorbing trees and plants in Egypt's New Administrative Capital, which is under construction in the desert east of Cairo.
Vertical forests pack thousands of square metres of greenery into just a few hundred square metres of urban space, providing shade and creating habitats for birds and insects, according to Boeri.
The trees, shrubs and plants absorb carbon dioxide, produce oxygen and filter dust from the air.
In recent years, large-scale green architecture projects have been taking root in major cities, from Singapore’s Gardens by the Bay to Sydney’s One Central Park.
Meanwhile, Liuzhou Forest City - another Boeri project- is under construction in the southern Chinese province of Guangxi. It will have more than 40,000 trees and 1 million plants covering its buildings. The trees and plants in Liuzhou Forest City are expected to annually absorb 10,000 tonnes of CO2 and 57 tonnes of pollutants, while producing about 900 tonnes of oxygen.
In the Netherlands, Boeri has also designed the 19-story Trudo Vertical Forest, which will house 125 affordable units targeting low-income families.
Heatherwick Studio's EDEN skyscraper has plant-filled balconies