- Rooftop gardens and green roofs have numerous environmental and wellbeing benefits.
- Australia is far behind international cities in implementing green roofs and rooftop gardens.
- Experts argue for changes in regulations to mandate green roofs in new developments and provide incentives for developers to include them.
- The City of Sydney and Melbourne are working on policies and amendments to increase the uptake of green roofs.
- The slow adoption of green roofs in Australia is attributed to challenges such as load capacity, waterproofing, and retrofitting issues.
This summary was created using www.anysummary.app
Jesus that was an overly long article. The auto tldr didn’t even scrape the main points. Why is it hard to do?
Gardens are heavy and load is a safety issue. Waterproofing and damp are an issue Maintenance and getting stuff up to the roof is messy.
The last point in the summary isn’t too far off your personal summary.
I’m hoping that people aren’t using the summaries as a replacement for reading the article. I only put them there to trigger the search engine on search-lemmy.com. The keywords are important.
Yeah getting compost up to the roof would be a hassle. Pretty sure most buildings are equipped to deal with a few extra tonnes though. Be a huge disaster if they aren’t
The article says most buildings can bare loads of 400kg but small trees and other garden setups can be 1300kg
That can be right. 400kg is like 4 people. That’s not correct.
Per square metre
Yeah. Makes sense
This is the best summary I could come up with:
If you look down from Helen Baker’s apartment balcony, you’ll see big communal gardens filled with daises and olive trees, kangaroo paws and carpet roses.
But, despite their long list of possible benefits, experts acknowledge their take-up in Australia has generally been slow, and much slower than many comparable cities around the world.
It is a similar story in Melbourne where, in 2019, deputy lord mayor Nicholas Reece wrote an impassioned piece in The Age newspaper calling for the city’s buildings to add green roofs.
“Cities like Singapore, Toronto, Munich as well as Berlin, Chicago, London, Seattle, Tokyo and San Francisco, most recently New York have all created a greener city by introducing planning requirements that effectively mandate green roofs and green space in new developments,” he explains.
Dr Osmond wants to see councils look abroad to countries and cities which have had greater success than Australia at greening rooftops.
While back at Aberfeldie, Helen hopes more Australians have a chance to pick flowers and experience the joy of their own rooftop garden.
The original article contains 1,300 words, the summary contains 169 words. Saved 87%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!