Rooftop Gardens
Rooftop Gardens
Whether on one-story structures or on skyscrapers, rooftop
gardens are havens with a charm of their own. For the owners, they
provide private worlds in which to grow plants and escape the
bustle of city life. All this, of course, is made possible with
soil brought in and carried to the top of the building for the pots
and boxes that comprise the rooftop garden. If you have ever seen a
penthouse garden, you know what a feeling of space it gives,
especially if the building is high. It is like being on a mountain
top, with a panoramic view that on clear days seems limitless.
Build Windbreaks
Delightful as these skyline gardens are, they do present
problems. The wind, for example, snaps trees and tears up
plantings. Arrangements must be made to provide shelter in the form
of fences or other barriers. These also give needed privacy. Winds
constantly dry out the soil so that in summer when the sun is hot,
plants often need watering two or three times a day. Pergolas,
lattice fences, wood panels, and laths can be erected to provide
shade but still allow air and sun to enter.
Winter cold is another problem. In cold regions, where soil
freezes solidly, evergreen plants are often wind burned through
loss of moisture that is hard to replace when the soil is frozen.
The sun, too, draws off moisture and causes sunscald. Rooftop
gardens only a few stories up are less affected by wind and are
often easier to care for than plantings on the ground. They are
usually protected by buildings on one or more sides and get sun for
only a part of the day.
Roof Must be Strong
At the start make certain the roof is strong enough to support
the weight of containers filled with soil. Modern buildings usually
are, but you will be wise to have your structure checked by a
building inspector. Then make sure that water can be drained away
through pipes. Most important, build a wall around the edge of the
roof high enough to serve as a guard. This can be constructed with
some harmonizing materials such as concrete, brick, and wood.
The next step is to make a plan. On the whole, simple, formal
designs are best in the limited area of a roof. Allow for some
large boxes for trees and shrubs and for or raised beds, which will
give the feeling of flower borders. Erect fences and lay out
several enclosed areas for dining, sunbathing, and reading.
Only those who have lugged soil in baskets and boxes onto
elevators or up flights of stairs know what this involves, yet
without it there can be no garden. If you go to all this effort,
obtain good soil, since the labor and cost for good and bad soil
are about the same. As for containers, be certain they are large
enough to hold sufficient earth. Shrubs, vines, and roses need a
depth of eighteen inches; trees need considerably more. For
perennials, annuals, and bulbs, a depth of ten to twelve inches is
satisfactory. If boxes are equipped with wheels, it will be easy to
move them around and water will pass through the holes without
interference.
Since rooftop space is limited, try to have boxes fit specific
areas. Here is your opportunity to introduce interesting shapes
suited to the overall design. If you set up boxes in step fashion,
you can grow more plants in a limited area. Allow some space for
vines and espaliered plants to cover walls, fences, and other
vertical surfaces.
Instead of adding soil to all the containers, fill a few of the
largest with moist peat or sphagnum moss. Flowering potted plants
can be plunged directly into these and be replaced when they are
past their prime. This may be expensive, but it always seems
worthwhile, and you do not have to replace a large amount of
worn-out soil after a period of years.
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