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Green Roofs/Vertical Gardens

Patrick Blanc : A Vertical Garden for San Francisco

Patrick Blanc visits San Francisco to oversee the installation of more than 100 native plant species – more than 4,000 plants for a new Vertical Garden – Mur Vegetal – designed by Blanc to grace The Sam Cuddeback Assembly Wing of The Drew School.

Patrick Blanc Feb 2011 - Photo © Alice Joyce

The Drew School New Roots Project encompasses a 14,500 sq. ft. LEED-Gold certified building designed by Boris Dramov of ROMA Design Group – project architects, with Bonnie Fisher – liaison involved in the ‘greening’ aspects.

The renowned firm of Rana Creek — designers of the California Academy of Science‘s living roof, is creating a living roof for the Drew School addition, surely destined to be a new San Francisco landmark. The roof garden planting  will cover 2,630 sq. ft. area, and along with the green wall, will breathe welcome fresh air in this urban environment.

The artistry of botanist Patrick Blanc has garnered aficionados worldwide, with some 450 living walls created to-date, including the Verdantly Vertical display on London’s Athenaeum Hotel Picadilly, featured on AGTB.

The San Francisco project heralds the largest installation created by Blanc in the United States.

Patrick Blanc’s decision to install California native species is an exciting, innovative highlight of the Assembly Wing’s green swathe, from selections such as Artemisa tridentata and the rare Galvezia speciosa – Channel Island Bush Snapdragon, to Mimulus and Solanum xanti.

Installation of Native Plant Species (Photo: Alice Joyce)

To talk with Blanc is to experience the designer’s enthusiastic response to California’s vast plant life. Perhaps never more so than when one hears him discussing the relationship of California plants to the region’s beguiling hummingbirds. Blanc’s selection of countless red and orange flowering natives have been chosen to foster a vibrant hummingbird habitat within the wall’s community of plantings. Once the garden is completed, you can look for the sprightly trumpets of Salvias, along with blooming Zauschneria & Ribes, to name but a few genera. That these miraculous creatures are not found in Europe seemed to stimulate Blanc’s imagination, giving him an opportunity to design with hummers in mind.

Integral to the design are plants that aim to meet the Vertical Garden’s varying conditions, with species designed and installed according to their light and moisture requirements, or the ability to withstand windy conditions or full shade, for instance, taking in an array of Iris, Heuchera, Viola, Aquilegia, Penstemon and Lewisia.

Vertical Garden Installation (Photo: Alice Joyce)

Scaffolding should be removed in a week or so, giving the plants a chance to settle in. An opening ceremony is planned for late-April. Blanc expects the plants to have grown and filled in by September.

Look for project updates on Alice’s Garden Travel Buzz.

Celebrating Patrick’s project for Drew School

2011 Update

6 comments to Mur Vegetal: Patrick Blanc Designs A Vertical Garden for San Francisco

  • Alice, wonderful review !!

  • great review and what a fabulous work this will be…

  • Thanks for posting. It’s fascinating to see Blanc’s work in San Francisco. Fellow blogger Lula and I are working on a joint post on some of Blanc”s creations in Europe, with recent photos and reports on how they have fared over the years.

  • It is so exciting that green roofs are appearing all over the US, and now green walls. The all native plants aspect is wonderful. I hope you will go back and show us photos of it filled in.

  • Alice, Thanks for posting this info. I was shooting yesterday one in Brussels and have other two from Berlin and Madrid and as Jill says we will soon have a post on those works. I did not visit the one in London, but with your info, it is going to be in my next visit!

  • Wow! – how great to be able to see it as it is being constructed. I love Monsieur Blanc’s green glasses and hair! Salvia and Zauschneria will be great for the hummers. It will be interesting to see how it progresses. I hope to get back to the Tacoma wall later this year when it has grown out more to see how our Pacific NW wall is progressing (or not).