The Vulcano Buono, in Nola, Italy, is a massive commercial shopping complex that rises out of the ground like an elegant dome volcano that just happens to be covered in a rich blanket of greenery. More than 2,500 plants provide a sustainable carpet that covers an array of shops and restaurants, a cinema complex, an outdoor amphitheater, a hotel, and a market, creating a design that is every bit as much landscape as it is architecture.
In China, the design for the new Dalian Shide Stadium plays upon the idea of the earth itself opening up to envelope an open sports arena. Two massive walls cradle seating and field areas, and each wall is covered with plants and grass which transform the barriers into monumental green lattices that bend the traditional garden vertically. Topping the structure is a network of cables and fabric structures that reiterate the motif of airy openness.
If that sounds too science fiction, it's only because our current environment is so desperately devoid of such features. But if new developments of all varieties were to steadily incorporate these strategies into everyday design, such a reality could come sooner than one might expect. Take green roofs, which Andrew Wickham has already so expertly covered. Atop urban building pads, they bring a reinvigorating sense of nature to an often lifeless constructed ambiance. As part of a school or educational facility, they can help students directly understand the importance of environmental issues. Mixed into homes, they improve insulation and could even be used for gardening and mini-farming, thereby increasing self-sufficiency. Other tactics, such as pervious paving in lower trafficked zones, bioswales, or even the simple act of adding foliage and natural shade to otherwise barren streets or plazas, can also contribute.
Ultimately, the goal remains bringing elements currently associated with specialized sustainable design into the realm of normalcy. Because I personally think it would be really cool to one day walk through a city, see landscape beautifully intertwined with architecture, and realize it's now a best practice and no longer the measure of a sustainable project.
Albert Lam is a Project Coordinator at California-based LPA Inc. He is a LEED accredited professional who specializes in the design and implementation of K-12 schools.