Yahoo – AFP,
Park Chan-Kyong, 27 May 2015
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From
stylish, manicured creations to small vegetable plots, gardens are
taking to
the rooftops of the South Korean capital Seoul (AFP Photo/Danny Kim)
|
Seoul (AFP)
- From stylish, manicured creations to small vegetable plots, gardens are
taking to the rooftops of the South Korean capital Seoul -- bringing dashes of
spontaneity and colour to the skyline of one of the world's most densely
populated cities.
With help
from the municipal government, otherwise largely drab buildings are being
crowned with flower beds, allotments and trees, where the scent of fresh
blossoms in the springtime can briefly mask the fumes from the traffic below.
The project
has produced one of the largest rooftop gardens in Asia, Garden 5, which is
spread across the top of four 10-storey buildings and linked by skywalks, with
a total surface area equal to three football fields.
![]() |
Rooftop
garden of the 'Garden 5'
shopping mall, pictured in Seoul,
South Korea (AFP
Photo/Danny Kim)
|
Inter-M
Corp., a broadcasting and audio equipment maker housed in a grey, nondescript,
seven-storey office building in northern Seoul, decided to convert their roof
several years ago.
Completed
in late 2013 at a cost of 110 million won ($100,000) -- half provided by City
Hall -- the 450 square meter (4,840 square feet) garden boasts azalea, lilies,
maple trees, herbs and two small pavilions.
Company
spokesman Bae Seung-San said staff used it to unwind, while potential customers
were taken to the roof as part of a sales pitch.
"When
we have foreign buyers, we throw barbecue parties here, with music playing on
our equipment," Bae said.
The
municipal financial support comes with a rider -- any garden must be properly
maintained and opened for public use within five years of its completion.
The green
fund
Since the
project began in 2002, the city government has spent more than 60 billion won
($57 million) helping to bankroll rooftop gardens, allotments or small
ecological parks on more than 650 buildings around the city.
"We
need more green, but don't really have the budget to buy the land for urban
parks," said Bang Seong-Weon, a municipal official in charge of the Green
Roof Construction programme.
"If
you green the rooftops, land prices cease to be an issue," Bang said.
Home to 20
percent of South Korea's 50 million people, Seoul is a modern, thriving city
with a population density nearly twice that of New York and eight times greater
than Rome.
Largely
destroyed in the 1950-53 Korean War, Seoul was rebuilt at a time of rapid
industrialisation and laissez-faire urban planning that resulted in an uninspiring
landscape of cookie-cutter apartment blocks and utilitarian office buildings.
In the last
10 to 15 years, efforts have been made to revitalise the city architecturally
and environmentally with varying degrees of success.
Bang is
keen to highlight the economic as well as environmental benefits of the roof
gardens which both absorb heat and act as insulators for buildings, reducing
energy needed to provide heating and cooling in Seoul's freezing winters and
hot, humid summers.
"And
they improve the landscape, giving people a sense of the changing
seasons," he added.
A roof
for all seasons
While other
high-density Asian cities have also seen a turn to rooftop gardens, the scale
of Seoul's programme sets it apart.
"I've
never seen anything like this before," said Choi Da-Yeon, a 20-year-old
student as she strolled among the garden's flower beds and trees with her
boyfriend at Garden 5.
"We
don't have enough green spaces in Seoul. Somewhere like this give you a real
breathing space," Choi said.
A leading
proponent of the rooftop movement is Han Moo-Young a professor of civil and
environmental engineering at Seoul National University.
At a cost
of 200 million won provided by City Hall, corporate donations and his own
money, Han laid a rooftop flower and vegetable garden that covers an 840 square
meter rooftop on one of the main campus buildings.
University
staff, local residents and an organisation for disabled people tend the
vegetables growing on one half of the roof, and the flower beds on the other
half which also host six beehives.
"We
hold music concerts here and make kimchi together with students and residents.
It's a community," Han said.
"You
see the bees and butterflies and you get that sense of being in nature,"
he said.
Seoul
Skygarden
While the
rooftop project was designed as a cooperative effort involving government,
corporates and individuals, the Seoul authorities are about to start work on a
far larger undertaking to convert a half-mile stretch of abandoned 1970s
highway into an elevated park.
The city
has engaged Dutch architects MVRDV to design the Seoul Skygarden, due to be
completed in late 2017, partly inspired by the success of New York City's
elevated High Line.
In total,
the pedestrian park spanning Seoul's main station will be home to 254 species
of flora, as well as an nursery arboretum to provide cuttings and saplings that
can be transplanted to other rooftop gardens around the city.
Exposed to
strong sunlight, the elevated gardens need more care and frequent watering,
while taking a bit more effort to get to, acknowledged Seo Jin-Sook who grows
vegetables atop the university.
"However,
looking at the beautiful scenery on top of the rooftop while gardening is a
healing experience for me," she said.
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