Patrick Blanc’s vertical gardens at Pérez Art Museum create “living walls”

Dezeen and MINI World Tour: French botanist Patrick Blanc, the inventor of green walls, explains how he created the hanging gardens on the outside of Herzog & de Meuron‘s new Pérez Art Museum in our next movie from Miami.

Pérez Art Museum Miami, by Herzog & de Meuron
Pérez Art Museum Miami, by Herzog & de Meuron

The new Pérez Art Museum Miami by Herzog & de Meuron, which opened last month, features clusters of columns covered with plants suspended from the building’s large overhanging roof.

Pérez Art Museum Miami, by Herzog & de Meuron
Pérez Art Museum Miami by Herzog & de Meuron

Blanc explains that the Swiss architects approached him to create these vertical gardens after they successfully worked together on the CaixaForum arts centre in Madrid, completed in 2008.

CaixaForum, Madrid by Herzog & de Meuron
CaixaForum, Madrid by Herzog & de Meuron. Photo by Duccio Malagamba

“We had already covered a wall totally with plants in Madrid,” says Blanc. “Here, for the museum, they asked me: ‘Do you think it’s possible to have the plants on columns instead?’ I said: ‘Yes, of course.'”

Pérez Art Museum Miami, by Herzog & de Meuron
Pérez Art Museum Miami by Herzog & de Meuron

Unlike a green wall, which faces in one direction, Blanc had to use different types of plants on each side of the hanging columns.

“For the outside surface, facing the sea, [the plants] have to face full sun, they have to face strong winds, sometimes salt and sometimes hurricanes,” he says. “The side facing the museum is very dark, so [I used] shade-loving plants.”

Pérez Art Museum Miami, by Herzog & de Meuron
Pérez Art Museum Miami by Herzog & de Meuron

Blanc claims the key to creating a successful vertical garden is the diversity of species used.

“I use many, many different species,” he explains. “Here, in Miami, I used 80 different species. Sometimes, I use up to 400. When you have so many species, it looks much more natural.”

Pérez Art Museum Miami, by Herzog & de Meuron
Pérez Art Museum Miami by Herzog & de Meuron

Vertical gardens are more than just aesthetically pleasing, Blanc goes on to claim.

“Because the roots are growing on the surface, [rather than into the ground], all of the micro-organisms associated with the roots are totally in contact with the air, [which is important] for de-pollution,” he says, “Also, you have benefits of insulation.”

The Oasis of Aboukir green wall by Patrick Blanc
The Oasis of Aboukir green wall by Patrick Blanc

He continues: “And, of course, the target it to use water collected from the roof. With a horizontal garden you lose a lot of water through percolation in the soil. You only have useful water when you have a vertical garden.”

Blanc believes that vertical gardens have become so popular because they provide an interesting and space-efficient way of introducing greenery into cities and claims he doesn’t mind that so many other people have taken on his idea.

The Oasis of Aboukir green wall by Patrick Blanc
The Oasis of Aboukir green wall by Patrick Blanc

“You use vertical space and usually it is empty space,” he says. “I think that is why they have been such a big success.” “Everybody in the world is doing vertical gardens. Of course, 20-25 years ago, I was the only one. But I am happy because with this idea I created a new vision of the interaction between human beings, the town and plants.”

Patrick Blanc
Patrick Blanc. Copyright: Dezeen

We drove around Miami in our MINI Cooper S Paceman. The music in the movie is a track called Jewels by Zequals. You can listen to the full track on Dezeen Music Project.

Our MINI Paceman in Miami
Our MINI Paceman in Miami

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Pérez Art Museum create “living walls”
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Patrick Blanc creates world’s tallest vertical garden for Jean Nouvel’s Sydney tower

World's tallest living wall by Patrick Blanc at One Central Park

News: Jean Nouvel’s One Central Park residential tower in Sydney will feature the world’s tallest vertical garden by inventor of living walls, Patrick Blanc.

Blanc, who has been designing living walls for over 30 years, has been working with Nouvel to install plants and vines up the 166-metre facade of Sydney’s One Central Park tower – which when completed later this year will become the tallest living wall in the world.

“The building, together with my vertical garden, will be an architectural work floating in the air, with plants growing on the walls – it will create a very special result that will be very new to Sydney,” said Blanc.

Patrick Blanc creates world's tallest vertical garden for Jean Nouvel's Sydney tower

The vertical garden consists of 190 native Australian and 160 exotic plant species. The shrubbery covers 50 percent of the building’s facade and according to the designers intends to extend the greenery from the adjacent park onto the building.

Patrick Blanc creates world's tallest vertical garden for Jean Nouvel's Sydney tower

The Central Park project by Ateliers Jean Nouvel consists of two adjoining residential towers that house 624 apartments. Nouvel’s towers are 116 metres and 64.5 metres in height and are part of a larger mixed-use development that includes apartments, shops, cafes, restaurants and office units.

One Central Park cantilever

The tallest tower features a large cantilever that contains 38 luxury penthouse apartments. On the underneath, there is a heliostat of motorised mirrors that direct sunlight down onto the surrounding gardens. After nightfall the cantilever is used as a canvas for a LED light installation by artist Yann Kersalé.

Public tours of Central Park project were held in June and the development is due for completion by January 2014.

Patrick Blanc creates world's tallest vertical garden for Jean Nouvel's Sydney tower

Blanc has also created a new living wall that features waves of 7600 plants for Paris Design Week which will be officially inaugurated tomorrow.

Other living walls we’ve featured recently include London’s largest green wall in Victoria that the designers said will combat flooding and a family house that conceals a wall of plants behind its slate-clad facade.

World's tallest living wall by Patrick Blanc at One Central Park
Central Park Sydney

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Patrick Blanc creates world's tallest vertical garden for Jean Nouvel's Sydney tower

Images courtesy Atelier Jean Nouvel.

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garden for Jean Nouvel’s Sydney tower
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The Oasis of Aboukir green wall by Patrick Blanc

Patrick Blanc, the inventor of living walls, has completed his latest vertical garden, covering the side of a five-storey Parisian block with waves of 7600 plants (+ slideshow).

The Oasis of Aboukir by Patrick White for Paris Design Week

L’Oasis D’Aboukir (the Oasis of Aboukir) is a 25-metre-high green wall by botanist and researcher Patrick Blanc, which covers a building facade in the second arrondissement of the city.

The wall features plants from 237 different species and appears to grow up the facade in diagonal waves. It was planted in the spring and covers the previously raw concrete facade on the corner of Aboukir Street and Petits Carreaux street.

The Oasis of Aboukir by Patrick White for Paris Design Week

“I am very happy to contribute to the welfare and environmental consciousness of the inhabitants of a historic district in the heart of Paris,” said Blanc, who has been creating green walls for more than 30 years.

The Oasis of Aboukir by Patrick White for Paris Design Week

The installation will be officially opened on Tuesday to coincide with Paris Design Week, which runs from 9 to 15 September.

The Oasis of Aboukir by Patrick White for Paris Design Week

Other living walls we’ve featured recently include London’s largest green wall in Victoria that the designers said will combat flooding and a family house that conceals a wall of plants behind its slate-clad facade.

The Oasis of Aboukir by Patrick White for Paris Design Week
Sketch – click for larger image

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The Oasis of Aboukir by Patrick White for Paris Design Week

Photographs are by Yann Monel.

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by Patrick Blanc
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Vertical Garden

A l’occasion de la semaine du design à Paris qui se déroulera du 9 au 15 septembre, l’Oasis d’Aboukir, une création de Patrick Blanc, sera inauguré le mardi 10 Septembre. Un jardin vertical construit en seulement 7 semaines à l’angle de la rue d’Aboukir et de la rue des petits Carreaux à découvrir en images.

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Floating gardens by Anne Holtrop

Dutch architect Anne Holtrop has collaborated with green technology firm Studio Noach and botanist Patrick Blanc to propose an artificial floating island containing gardens and a spa. (more…)