From the Blog

Rooftop dog park in NW provides unique amenity

by STEPHEN TSCHIDA, April 28, 2014

Rooftop dog park of the City Market at O apartment complex in Northwest Washington
Source: WJLA / ABC 7

WASHINGTON (WJLA) – The first Erin Siegel does when she gets home is walk her dogs Darla and Theo. But the three of them don’t want to head for the street. Instead, they aim for the sky.

Siegel is a resident of the City Market at O apartment complex in Northwest Washington. It’s a dazzling new development over a once grungy parking lot. What was it that really hooked Siegel on this complex? The roof.

“You get the views of the city and you get the ability to play with your dogs, socialize them, get exercise,” she said.

The complex’s developers wondered what to do with a large roof area before deciding to let it go to the dogs. The ultimate amenity is the rooftop dog park. There are special areas for big dogs and little dogs, as well as lookout so that tenants’ four-legged friends can take in the spectacular view.

“It’s been fabulous,” City Market at O developer Richard Lake said. “It’s been absolutely amazing. Nearly forty percent of our renters have dogs.”

Just off the top-floor doggie playground is another special room with dog washing equipment for both large and small canines.

“This was a huge deciding factor in us coming here,” tenant Abby Slitor said. “It was relatively the same price as for amenities and everything else, and this is obviously an awesome amenity to have in the city.”

While the area around the apartment complex at 7th and O NW has improved, the neighborhood that was once a hotbed for drug and gang activity can still be a bit rough around the edges. City Market tenant Christin Carey said her dog Bogey’s occasional need for a night time bathroom trip is much safer on the roof than the street.

“As a woman I don’t want to be out in the dark alone,” she said.

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Can Mexico City’s roof gardens help the metropolis shrug off its smog?

by SAM JONES, theguardian.com, April 24, 2014

A garden on the roof of the environment secretary's air-monitoring labs in Mexico City Source: www.theguardian.com

A garden on the roof of the environment secretary’s air-monitoring labs in Mexico City
Source: www.theguardian.com

Green roofs sprouting across Mexican capital not only purify the air but aid recovery of hospital patients, says environment chief.

In a sheltered corner of one of the greatest megacities on Earth, there is a place where lizards careen around tree trunks, butterflies drink nectar from vermillion flowers and hummingbirds whisk the heavy air with their wings.

Stand in the botanical gardens of the Bosque de Chapultepec (the Chapultepec forest) and listen carefully enough, and something remarkable happens: birdsong begins to pierce the groan of trucks and the screech of taxi horns from the long avenue that bisects the park.

The gardens are home to one of a growing number of azoteas verdes – or green roofs – that are springing up around Mexico City as part of the metropolis’s efforts to purge its air of the pollution that has long been among its least-desired claims to fame.

The azotea verde atop the circular single-story offices of the botanical gardens, is planted with hardy stonecrop, which can withstand the Mexico City summer, but which also produces oxygen and serves as a filter to draw out the carbon dioxide and heavy metal particles in the air. As well as providing the park’s squirrels with an arena in which to practise their parkour, the roof help regulates the temperature of the offices below and soaks up rainwater to keep the building dry.

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Hong Kong’s fish farms in the sky

by PETER SHADBOLT, BBC News, April 2, 2014

Michael Leung’s honey commands a premium price Photo: HK Honey Source: www.bbc.com/news

Michael Leung’s honey commands a premium price
Photo: HK Honey
Source: www.bbc.com/news

Under eerie blue lights designed to simulate the ocean depths, hundreds of fish swim serenely through the bubbling waters of their circular tanks, 15 floors up in the sky.

There are 11 plastic tanks in total, holding a combined 80,000 litres of salt water.

They are full of grouper, a white-fleshed fish, which are all destined to end up on the plates of restaurant-goers across Hong Kong.

This is the scene at Oceanethix, one of the numerous so-called “vertical fish farms” in the special administrative region, which have become a key fixture of its supply chain.

For while most fish farms around the world are at sea, or at least, land level, in Hong Kong it is more often a necessity to put them many floors up in tall buildings.

This is because as one of the most densely populated places in the world, there is simply very little spare space. So fish farms have to fit in where they can.

For the small firms that dominate the industry, it is worth the effort, as Hong Kong has an insatiable appetite for fish and seafood. It consumes more than 70kg (11 stone) per capita every year, 10 times more than in the US.

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Urban gardening for city slickers

by MICHAEL KELLY, Independent.ie, February 25, 2013

Photo: Urban Farm Source: www.urbanfarm.ie

Photo: Urban Farm
Source: www.urbanfarm.ie

There is always a tendency to consider food growing as something that always has to happen in a field or large garden – GIYing is, unfortunately, often considered the preserve of country people or farmers. In reality, it’s an equally viable hobby in an urban environment.

In fact, if we are to provide a genuine alternative to the modern food chain, then food growing is something that is going to have to happen in much smaller spaces.

I visited two projects in Dublin recently that really challenge your assumptions about where food can be produced. The first is Kaethe Burt O’Dea’s blink-and-you-miss-it community garden on Sitric Road in Stoneybatter. The second is what you might call a ‘hyper-urban’ food growing space on the roof of the Chocolate Factory on Kings Inn Street, a stone’s throw from O’Connell St.

The Sitric Community Garden is literally a street corner, a sliver of green space at the end of a terrace of two-up/two-down houses.

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You won’t believe what passengers are doing on the roof of this Tokyo train station, but it will make you green with envy

by Derek Markham, TreeHugger, March 26, 2014

The plot thickens at Tokyo train stations, as passengers grow on the go with these rooftop garden allotments Photo: Soradofarm Source: www.treehugger.com

The plot thickens at Tokyo train stations, as passengers grow on the go with these rooftop garden allotments
Photo: Soradofarm
Source: www.treehugger.com

The plot thickens at Tokyo train stations, as passengers grow on the go with these rooftop garden allotments.

It’s one thing to start and tend a garden if you have plenty of space at home, as well as the time to care for it, and another thing entirely to do so if you spend a good chunk of your day commuting, and lack a place at home for even a tiny garden.

But an ingenious solution is cropping up in Japan, where the East Japan Railway Company has collaborated with a station entertainment company to create a series of rooftop gardens on train stations, where commuters can create their own tiny gardens and tend to them while they wait for their train to arrive.

The Soradofarm project, which currently has five locations, including at Tokyo’s JR Ebisu station, allows people to rent their own garden allotment measuring just 3 square meters (tools, water, and garden equipment, and even seeds are included) to try their hand at growing food, flowers, and more.

The price isn’t cheap, as some of the plots cost 100,440 JPY per year (~$960 USD), but considering that it may be the best option for many of the people who are interested in it, due to space issues, these urban rooftop garden allotments could be a viable way to get some green in their busy lives.

Aside from the possibility of growing even a tiny amount of fresh food for themselves, these innovative urban gardens may be an effective solution for decreasing stress and increasing the amount of time spent out in the fresh air and sunshine, especially in areas where outdoor space is at a premium, and having a place to call your own is hard to come by.

Although there are just five urban rooftop gardens installed at the train stations so far, according to Springwise, East Japan Railways plans to open up more of these garden allotments “on top of or near to each one of its stations” in the future.

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Inflatable hot tubs coming to NYC roof for ‘epic’ nightlife movie experience

by JEN CARLSON, Gothamist, April 22, 2014

People sit in hot tubs at a Hot Tub cinema event on a warehouse roof in Hackney, east London September 6, 2012. Photo: REUTERS / Olivia Harris Source: www.gothamist.com

People sit in hot tubs at a Hot Tub cinema event on a warehouse roof in Hackney, east London September 6, 2012.
Photo: REUTERS / Olivia Harris
Source: www.gothamist.com

Soaking in a rooftop hot tub with a few pals, gazing out over the city’s twinkling skyline, and sipping a few cocktails while you watch a movie—well that does sound delightful. But if we know anything about going out in this city, it’s that things are never going to be like what you think they’re going to be like… unless, were you picturing this?:

Well then, CHEERS!

The people at Hot Tub Cinema are bringing their kiddie pools and some warm water over from the UK next month. On May 8th, they’re partnering up with Crowdtilt for “a unique experience (first in US) you won’t want to miss out on!” For $55 you can purchase a spot in a “hot tub,” and with that you’ll also get an open bar, popcorn, a movie, and according to the press release an “epic/priceless story to share with your friends.” The ones you did not invite to the hot tub party.

There are 14 tubs, which means 14 “Tub Captains” (THEIR THING NOT OURS), and 100 spots total. You can claim your spot here… and please drink responsibly.

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