March-April 2010

Baltimore's Golden Achievers

A watershed headquarters goes green with LEED.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

Photo: @iStockphoto.com/tiero

By David C. Richardson

Comments


Roby was worried that the building did not present a welcoming environment, nor did it reflect “what the association was all about,” she says. “We offered training workshops, and there was no real space for that.” And with a touch of irony, she notes that the row house plot, like many other lots in the neighborhood, was entirely paved or built up, rendering it virtually 100% impervious to rainwater.

Advertisement

A Green Consensus
“We had a community charrette in February 2005, and because we’re a watershed association, the consensus of the group was that we should have a building that focused on saving water and saving energy,” says Roby. “Everybody wanted a green roof.” And, she adds, there was one more point on which everyone agreed: “We should be LEED certified.”

“Their big issue was water,” says Darraugh Brady of Ziger Snead LLP. As lead architect on the project, she says the association wasn’t interested in “the most sophisticated systems.” Instead, they wanted the project to “demonstrate technologies that homeowners and businesses could replicate” at other locations in the neighborhood.

The group imagined a bright, airy office space in the front lobby and a general meeting and classroom space to replace the industrial kitchen in the back. Roby also wanted to avoid, as much as possible, chopping up the workspaces with either walls or cubicles.

However, within those basic parameters, Brady was asked to integrate numerous energy-efficient and environmentally friendly features that would allow the building to qualify for LEED certification—all this while keeping in mind the tight budget of a community based not-for-profit organization.

Photo: Alain Jaramillo
Sedums growing on HRWA’s new living roof

For Brady, the small size of the project was a change of pace. “We typically do more academic and high-end installations, so it was unique for us in terms of size,” she says. The firm’s portfolio includes among its recent projects the 61,410-square-foot Brown Center, an ultramodern glass and steel performing arts facility at Baltimore’s Maryland Institute College of Art.

“This was a tiny project for us,” she says. Brady was excited to have the opportunity to work on a LEED project and was inspired by her client’s commitment to the cause. Both, she says, helped convince her boss that the project would be more than worth the effort, in terms of the good will it would generate.

Prescott Gaylord, a builder who lives in the community, attended a few of the early design charrettes as an interested neighbor. “It was kind of neat; they had a lot of the stakeholders there,” he says. As co-owner of Baltimore Green Construction, he also noted that the group’s vision “was right up our alley.” Although he says his firm works on “anywhere from $150,000 residential rehabs to multimillion-dollar commercial new construction,” the HRWA office renovation represented his firm’s “sweet spot in terms of size and complexity.”

Gaylord responded to the project request-for-proposal, and his firm was selected as general contractor on the project.

Waterproof or Living Roof
According to Gaylord, the green roof, because of the increasing popularity of the technique, was “probably one of the easiest parts of project.”

He explains, “You can go to a green roofing company and buy all the materials and labor. There is a lot of information out there on what kind of roofing you need underneath, what kind of support you need, what kind of slip sheets and roof barriers you need.” And, he adds, it’s even possible to find bargains. “We were able to get a good price because we were able to procure some materials that were left over from a very large job.”

From an architectural standpoint, aside from the need to sister each of the building’s rafters to bear the load of the membrane and the growth medium, Brady agrees that the living roof posed few significant challenges.

But Gaylord cautions that, regardless of the roofing system being installed, working on small roofs can present some challenging situations. The most important consideration is safety, he says. “With any number of people moving about on a small roof with no rails,” safety can never be taken for granted.

Mike Furbish, president of the Furbish Company, which installed the HRWA’s living roof, points out that small projects can pose interesting logistical challenges as well. With no room in the budget for a crane to hoist materials up to the roof, he says, his workers had to fashion a pulley system using rope, ladder, and pail to get materials to the work site.

After installing the membranes and growth medium, Furbish opted to populate the green roof using multiple species of sedums, which he says provide reliable, drought-tolerant, year-round ground cover. By the time planting began, in late autumn of 2006, Furbish could see a few flakes of snow wafting over the roof as crews put in the seedlings. Though a hard freeze would have made planting impossible, he says this fluke of the weather was not of serious concern for the viability of the plants. “We pay particular attention to getting rapid growth,” he notes, but he considers it advantageous to get the plants in before winter sets in, so they can become “acclimated” to the growth medium in order to be ready to take advantage of the entire growing season the following spring.

Furbish says the typical living roof requires very little maintenance. “You might occasionally pull some weeds or do some pruning—maybe deadheading some flower stalks—but it’s pretty minor stuff,” although he adds that the intensity of the maintenance effort depends on the client. “If the client is trying to achieve an aesthetic look, they might be very particular about volunteer plants showing up. But if you’re really interested in groundcover, stormwater management, and biodiversity, you sort of welcome anything that comes in, as long as it can thrive in conditions on the roof.” Invasive species, he says, are usually not a long-term worry. “We have a very shallow granular growth media, a lot of things that start off as a little seedlings really don’t have the infrastructure of growth media to support them, and they’ll die off over time.” Next Page >

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get Stormwater E-mail Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our Stormwater e-mail newsletter!