The Apartment Building of the Future?

AgroSouthWest002

This is really cool: a building that is not only environmentally friendy (low energy use, low impact building materials, passive heating and cooling, and so on), but also comes with its own hydroponic garden system.

What's neat is that this isn't vaporware--China is in the process of building a bunch of these. Here's how much green stuff the building will have:

AgroSouthElevation

Look hydroponicy stuff:

AgroGreenhouse004

Some more:

AgroRoofGarden001

And:

AgroGreenhouse003

It's got all sorts of convection air current stuff:

AgroClimateSummerWinter

And the apartments look nice too:

AgroInterior1

I wonder if it will have termite problems though....

More like this

A friend of mine, Colin Beavan (aka No Impact Man) once observed that cutting your energy usage should be as easy as rolling off a log - that as long as it is always easier to use more resources, and the path of least resistance heads towards taking the car or turning up the heat, we're destined to…
Ok, I've always hated those "Top 10 Ways to Green Your Apartment/Cat/Sex Toys/Shaving Equipment" articles, and yet they do serve a sort of purpose (at least the ones that aren't total rubbish) - narrowing things down and prioritizing is helpful. So for those of you teetering on the edge of joining…
Writing up the evaporative cooling post on cold atom techniques, I used the standard analogy that people in the field use for describing the process: cooling an atomic vapor to BEC is like the cooling of a cup of coffee, where the hottest component particles manage to escape the system of interest…
In the previous installments, I talked about identical particles and symmetry, and what that means for fermions. Given that there's only one other type of particle in the world, that sort of means that I need to explain what symmetry means in the case of bosons. When I explain this to the first-…

I wonder if it will have termite problems...

Only once.

More seriously, biodegradable means just that. Controlling when and how things biodegrade will always be a problem if you want to build green.

Are the gardens present for any reason other than to look pretty? And do they sell the fruit or just let the residents take them?

I don't know much about them echo-gnomics, but it seems difficult to imagine a place where land values are high enough to prompt construction of a twelve-story apartment building, yet it's cost-effective to give up 4-15 apartments worth of space in that building to raising fruit for sale. On the other hand if the point is just to allow tenants to walk into your "backyard" to pick fruit and make orange juice for breakfast or whatever, something normally limited to homeowners in California or something, that sounds like a really amazing bonus.

This is actually a variation on what is called 'vertical farming,' the only technology of which I am aware with the potential to free land from the plow and return it to forest and savanah. The logistical benefits of siting agricultural production in the heart of urban centers are also obvious.

BTW, the bottom picture shows three(!) sprouts and two adults. Times they are a changin', in China, that is.

By bob koepp (not verified) on 25 Feb 2008 #permalink

Before I saw this was in China, I was wondering who, exactly, is responsible for the plants? It might be less of an issue there, but here - are you paying a premium rent in return for the landlord's promise to keep up the greenery? Or do you get a place to plant your own (and have a responsibility to plant and maintain it)?

What's the premium for having a plot of land on the roof?

And how good's the security in the building and roof (to prevent theft, vandalism, etc.)?

Buildings like this are always fascinating, but in addition to some of the questions other folks have raised, a very real concern in the arid western states is that such a building may actually be illegal. I didn't read all the links info, but generally such buildings a collecting & reusing rain water, gray waste water, and so on. In a lot of the west there are so many users with claim on that water that you are *required* to pass it on down through the system within a certain limited time period (like a day).

Not that such buildings aren't a good idea, but they can run head-on into some rather byzantine systems that have developed over the last 150 years.

An interesting (and local to me) development is Dockside Green in Victoria, BC.

Those sprouts are distinctly blonde. Sounds like business as usual in China.

Saw a lovely propag^h^h^h documentary piece recently on green building in the ROC. The US is falling behind many, many other nations on this.

BTW, the bottom picture shows three(!) sprouts and two adults. Times they are a changin', in China, that is.

Don't worry the other 450 tenants will be home shortly they are in that lone automobile that just pulled up alongside the building.

By Fernando Magyar (not verified) on 26 Feb 2008 #permalink

This is Great! With all the rough and tumble issues we have to deal with it is a breath of fresh air to see this progress and be able to get excited about seeing where it goes over time!
Dave Briggs :~)

This is Great! With all the rough and tumble issues we have to deal with it is a breath of fresh air to see this progress and be able to get excited about seeing where it goes over time!
Dave Briggs