Vertical Gardens and 'Green Wall' GardensIncreasingly popular for use both as a design feature and space saving device, wall gardens or vertical gardens were first used widely used in courtyard situations, in smaller yards and as a way of hiding ugly fences and walls (picture right). Over recent years a lot of different systems for creating 'living walls' have been developed, landscape designers and home gardeners alike are finding new modular systems easy to install on walls and fences, when installed the right way hay can also improve the energy efficiency of a building by providing extra insulation. Many original installations of wall gardens involved simple planting systems for succulents, little water was required a quick simple vertical garden or living wall could be installed with little know how. |
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The 'living wall' systems that we see evolving today involve a greater emphasis on efficiant design of systems that are light weight, larger in scale, have automatic watering or irrigation systems and are low maintenace. Commercial buildings are now adopting vertical gardens both as an environmental feature and an integral part of architectural design. Kits and SystemsA range of new systems or kits have been designed to allow easy attachment to existing walls, Modular wall garden systems or 'kits' that consist of UV resistant PVC plant holders that can virtually 'stacked' up a wall with securing brackets even have built in drip system irrigation and allow a much wider variety of plants to be grown. Ferns, herbs, succulents as well as flowering plants can all be grown on systems that will cover a walled courtyard or really any vertical surface. Simple home made or DIY green wall systems that include pots attached to weld mesh, through to more efficient lightweight solutions that can include a drip irrigation system can all be used to create a fantastic wall or vertical garden |
History of Wall Gardens or Vertical GardensVertical Gardens or 'Living Walls' have been around for a long time, The Hanging Gardens of Babylon are the classic example. Patrick Blanc is probably the father of the modern 'Green Wall' or 'Wall Garden' with his 'mur vegetal' installations. Plants and growing mediums for wall gardensToday we have vertical gardens that grow in a range of mediums, from soilless mediums to traditional potting mixes, all have their place and benefits. Plants to consider include herbs and vegetables as well as ferns and grasses, succulents and flowering plants, all be successfully grown using the concept of a vertical garden, today a blank wall can be turned into a vegetable patch, herb garden or a lush green wall, with kits and systems readily available for sale in all Australian states. |
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