Perched 18 floors above Madison Street is a rooftop oasis. Capping the M Street Apartments are beds of crimson and tan grasses, corrugated metal tubs that hold still-green tomatoes and basil, and a woodchip-lined dog run. It’s a green roof to behold.
“It’s a huge selling point” for prospective renters, said Jennifer Farmer, a senior property manager for the building on Seattle’s First Hill. “There’s always a ‘wow’ when we come up here.”
But Seattle city leaders want to move past the “wow” factor for green roofs, and expand their use citywide. On Thursday they’re releasing a report that inventoried Seattle’s 62 vegetated roofs, which cover the equivalent of nine football fields.
“That’s a pretty big chunk of land,” said Seattle City Councilman Mike O’Brien. “(But) when you think about what’s possible in a city like Seattle, that’s just a drop in the bucket.”
The city’s 8 acres of green roofs and rooftop gardens account for less than 1/10 of 1 percent of roofs overall. The new report, which was a collaboration between Seattle and the University of Washington Green Futures Lab, explores the potential for and hurdles to increasing the number of planted roofs…
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Written by: Lisa Stiffler
Date: September 23, 2010
