Liuzhou, an industrial city in southern China, looks like a typical
modern Chinese metropolis, filled with concrete high-rises and often
shrouded in smog. But the city’s newest district, in planning now, will
be different: Every building, from schools to
office and apartment towers, will be covered in trees and plants.
Called “Forest City,” the area–roughly half the size of Central
Park–will be home to 30,000 people, 40,000 trees, and nearly 1 million
plants. It’s similar to a design first realized in Milan–where the
project’s architect, Stefano Boeri, completed two tree-covered
skyscrapers in 2014–but at a much larger scale.
The district, in the northern part of Liuzhou, will connect to the
rest of the city via a rail line, and will include two schools, a
hospital, and residential and commercial areas along with parks. From a
distance, the terraced, tree-covered buildings will
echo the shape of nearby hills.
In any project, Boeri’s team begins by planning landscaping on the
ground. But by adding a dense network of trees and shrubs to balconies,
it’s possible to multiply the benefits of greenery in an urban
neighborhood. In Milan, the two towers house as many
trees as might be found on five to seven acres of actual forest, on
roughly a tenth of the land. In Nanjing, China, where the architecture
firm is working on another two towers, the buildings will have as many
trees as nearly 10 acres of forest.
“[It’s] like a graft,” says Boeri. “You are nesting, in the center of
a super dense and polluted environment, an ecosystem which has an
amazing biodiversity, and which can really contribute in terms of
absorption of CO2, production of oxygen, and absorption
of the fine dust of pollution.”
Forest City, he says, will absorb an estimated 10,000 tons of carbon
dioxide and 57 tons of particulate air pollution each year, while
producing 900 tons of oxygen.
The architecture firm began working on the concept with another
Chinese municipality a few years ago, as the Chinese government began to
seek new approaches to development (that city, while still interested,
hasn’t yet chosen to implement the idea, while
Liuzhou is preparing to begin construction). Each year, millions of
people in rural China move to cities seeking better jobs; in the past,
government planners have often responded by adding suburban sprawl.
“They extend the periphery of the metropolis, and this addition of
low-priced, low-quality settlements produces every year this crazy
extension of a mediocre and polluted urban environment,” Boeri says. “I
think what now is evident to the government is that
this kind of answer to urbanization is now in doubt because it has so
many disadvantages in terms of quality of life, air pollution, the cost
in terms of commuting… I think they are in search of possible
alternatives.”
The design also helps fight climate change close to a source of
pollution. Cities are responsible for around three-quarters of the
world’s carbon emissions. “Forests are absorbing 35-40% of that CO2,”
says Boeri. “So the idea to move forests inside the city…it’s
a way to meet the enemy in its field.”
The development is also meant to produce fewer emissions when it’s
used. Buildings will run in part on geothermal energy and solar power,
streets will be walkable and bikeable, a train station will serve
commuters, and the city is also considering investing
in electric cars for the area.
“We are trying to always combine the presence of green with the
presence of technological devices such as renewable energy,” he says.
“All of this, in the end, works together. The leaves are also
contributing to reduce the temperature of the surfaces on
the sides of the building. In Milan in the summertime, the costs of
energy consumption are drastically reduced by the presence of the leaves
that are shading the facade.”
Incorporating thousands of trees on buildings poses new design
challenges. “We had, from the beginning, to deal with problems that
normally you don’t have when you build a traditional building,” he says.
In the first buildings in Milan, the architects worked
with botanists to ensure that the trees would survive, and with the
engineering firm Arup to calculate how heavy the soil should be (not too
heavy for balconies to support, but heavy enough to keep trees stable
on windy days) and developed a new way to stabilize
roots in planters. As they have tweaked this system, they test trees in
a wind tunnel in Florida to ensure that the design is safe. The overall
system, they say, is working. In Milan, the apartments are occupied (at
least one is also an Airbnb), and a team
of gardeners regularly rappel down the skyscrapers to take care of the
trees.
In Liuzhou, living in the new district will be different from living
anywhere else in the world–standing in a high-rise, residents will see a
city skyline made of leaves. Walking to work or the train station will
feel a little like walking in the woods.
It’s likely that biodiversity of animals will increase. In Milan, the
team has observed 20 species of birds nesting in the building, most of
which weren’t common in the city before. “You have this crazy perception
of proximity with nature when you are in your
bedroom or your kitchen,” Boeri says.
Though China has a history of planning some “eco cities” that were
never actually built–and construction of Forest City has yet to
begin–Boeri is confident that the project will continue to move forward.
After completing the concept design, the team is now
designing buildings for the first of three phases of construction. The
architects haven’t published the cost, but the Milan skyscrapers cost
only 5% more than traditional skyscrapers. Construction is likely to
begin in 2020.
As Boeri’s team plans similar buildings in Paris, Utrecht, and other
cities, he’s hoping that the Liuzhou development inspires others to
incorporate more greenery into facades. “I think that in two or three
years, there will be many other architects that
will start to replicate and to improve what we have done,” he says. “We
didn’t copyright anything, because we want to be copied, in a way. We
hope that there will be other architects that will be better than us.”
source: https://www.
Inside China’s plan for a massive forest-covered city
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