Auburn University: Green Roof
When Dean Anna Gramberg of the College of Liberal Arts was recently approached with a request to fund a speaker on the environment, she countered with a call for action instead of talk. The result was the student-led Auburn Sustainability Action Project which gave Auburn University’s Haley Center an environmentally-friendly cover of potted plants. The area is now known as the Green Roof.
Gramberg approached Lindy Biggs, AU professor of history and director of the Auburn Sustainability Initiative, with an offer to fund a project that students could get involved in and would improve the environment.
Biggs’s idea was a sustainability class for a small group of students chosen through an application process who would receive internship credit for the class. Gramberg approved the proposal and out of the 40 students who applied, 14 were accepted.
A team of students in the sustainability class designed the Green Roof, which is made up of rows of specially potted native plants that will provide environmental benefits such as reducing atmospheric carbon dioxide and controlling stormwater runoff and sewage.
“The average roof reaches temperatures of more than 120 degrees, while plants never become warmer than 80 degrees. So by insulating the roof with plants, you are effectively cutting down on energy costs,” said Biggs. “The plants will absorb significant amounts of water and prevent polluted runoff from going into the drains and sewage systems,” said Valerie Grupp, a political science major who worked as an intern with the Auburn Sustainability Initiative.
More information on the Auburn Green Roof Project
Gramberg approached Lindy Biggs, AU professor of history and director of the Auburn Sustainability Initiative, with an offer to fund a project that students could get involved in and would improve the environment.
Biggs’s idea was a sustainability class for a small group of students chosen through an application process who would receive internship credit for the class. Gramberg approved the proposal and out of the 40 students who applied, 14 were accepted.
A team of students in the sustainability class designed the Green Roof, which is made up of rows of specially potted native plants that will provide environmental benefits such as reducing atmospheric carbon dioxide and controlling stormwater runoff and sewage.
“The average roof reaches temperatures of more than 120 degrees, while plants never become warmer than 80 degrees. So by insulating the roof with plants, you are effectively cutting down on energy costs,” said Biggs. “The plants will absorb significant amounts of water and prevent polluted runoff from going into the drains and sewage systems,” said Valerie Grupp, a political science major who worked as an intern with the Auburn Sustainability Initiative.
More information on the Auburn Green Roof Project
Labels: green roof, landscape architecture, water quality


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