New Denver
EPA Building Topped Off with Green Roof
Opening Just in time
for GreenBuild Conference
Chicago,
IL — November
6, 2006 — Denver, CO, like many other
American cities, is working hard to become
environmentally responsible.
The city’s mayor, John Hickenlooper,
has announced an extensive sustainability initiative
dubbed “GreenPrint,” which is an
ambitious plan to convert city vehicles to
hybrids, reduce energy use in city buildings,
and build solar and methane power plants by
2007.
So it is not surprising
that Denver’s
new 232,000-square-foot U. S. Environmental
Protection Agency building, which opens in
a few months, will be a welcome addition to
the city and one of the Greenest facilities
in Denver—and the country.
Constructed with an
eye toward resource and energy efficiency,
the building aims to earn Gold certification
under the U.S. Green Building Council’s
Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design
(LEED) Rating System.
Environmentally and
energy preferable building products and materials
were used throughout as were photovoltaic
arrays and wind turbines to generate electricity.
And on the top of the building—a Green
roof.
“The architects and developers wanted
a Green roof for several reasons,” says
Sandra McCullough, with Weston Solutions, Inc.
(WESTON®) that installed the roof. “One
of the main reasons is that Denver has strict
stormwater runoff guidelines, and a Green roof
helps reduce runoff considerably.”
McCullough says that the architects and developers
also wanted a Green roof because it helps reduce
energy costs and can contribute to as many
as seven points toward LEED certification.
Why Modular?
The Green roof installed is an extensive Green
roof with low-growing vegetation such as sedum,
grasses, and other hearty, drought-resistant
plants installed in four or five inches of
growth media (soil). However, they had to choose
between a built-in-place system (where soil
is placed right on the roof and plants are
put in, as in a traditional garden) or a modular
system.
With a modular system, vegetation and growth
media are preplanted in modules made of 60
percent recycled plastic. The modules, which
come in varying sizes, are then placed on the
existing roof, one after another.
“They selected the GreenGrid modular
system because it is cost effective,” says
McCullough. “Also, the modules can be
picked up if the roof’s photovoltaic
panels or other mechanicals need servicing
and then replaced when repairs are completed.
You can’t do that with a built-in-place
system.”
In addition, because the modules can be pre-grown
at the nursery, they can be delivered to the
jobsite when needed. This also allows the plants
an opportunity to grow out in their installed
state.
McCullough adds that the Green roof will be
included in a Green tour of Denver scheduled
for the upcoming GreenBuild Conference, which
will take place in Denver on November 15 through
17, 2006.
For more information, visit www.greengridroofs.com,
or call Sandra McCullough at 312-424-3319.
About GreenGrid® Green
Roof System
GreenGrid® Green Roof System is a proprietary
technology of ABC Supply Co., Inc. licensed
exclusively to Weston Solutions, Inc.—a
leading employee-owned environment and redevelopment
firm, delivering comprehensive solutions to
complex problems for industry and government
worldwide.
For more information
about GreenGrid®,
visit www.greengridroofs.com or
contact Sandra McCullough at (312) 424-3306;
Jared Markham in Glastonbury, CT at (860) 368-3204;
Michael Rieger in Sherman Oaks, CA at (818)
332-1812, or Larry Vanselow in Seattle, WA
at (206) 521-7692.
For more information about WESTON, visit their
Web site at http://www.westonsolutions.com.
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