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A Green Roof Brings Beauty and Eco Benefits to the Community Commons

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Emma Atkinson

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Community Commons Green Roof

This article appears in the fall 2022 issue of University of听Denver Magazine. Visit the听听for bonus content and to read this and other articles in their original format.

Green roofs鈥攊dyllic retreats located at the top of buildings鈥攈ave become a popular way to beautify urban spaces and provide environmental benefits to structures and the spaces around them. Not to be left out, the 快活app incorporated a green roof into the design of its new Community Commons building. The expansive green space on the fourth-floor exterior deck nods to the beauty of Colorado鈥檚 native plants and the University鈥檚 sustainability goals.

The Community Commons鈥 green roof is an impressive feat of urban landscaping, featuring several garden beds that surround a floor-to-ceiling glass pavilion. Among the hardy plants in those beds: Tall native grasses that bend in the wind and provide a picturesque foreground for the foothills of the Rocky Mountains to the west and the downtown Denver skyline to the north.

This eye-popping view is intentional, says University architect Mark Rodgers, noting that the green space is meant to 鈥渃ut out the foreground of the houses and built structures; and [one can] just see the tops of trees, and then the mountains beyond and hopefully the beautiful sunsets.鈥

Aesthetics aside, the green roof complements the University鈥檚 plans to achieve carbon neutrality by 2030. Green roofs can help keep buildings cool, reduce building energy use and absorb rainwater. Just as important, any plants incorporated into the roof can capture and store carbon dioxide, considered one of the major contributors to climate change.听

The Community Commons鈥 green roof isn鈥檛 the first of its kind on campus. Technically, Rodgers says, 快活app has three green roof spaces; the other two are located at the Daniels College of Business and at Nelson Hall.

鈥淗owever, both of those roofs I would consider to be not anything close to the complexity, the ambition or the public-natured showcasing that we鈥檝e done at the Community Commons,鈥 he says.

The two other green roofs provided designers with valuable lessons related to long-term viability and ongoing maintenance. For one thing, green roofs with plantings require robust鈥攁nd leak-proof鈥攊rrigation systems. The elements are tough on a rooftop, so plantings need to be watered accordingly. Another consideration, Rodgers says, involves the potential for invasive plant species to put down roots鈥攓uite literally鈥攚here they don鈥檛 belong.

鈥淥ne of the easiest examples is a cottonwood [tree],鈥 he explains. 鈥淸The] tap root has a way of getting deep, quick, and can get its way through any minor flaw in the way that the [irrigation system鈥檚] water membranes are applied to the roof鈥檚 surface. So, if you鈥檙e at ground level and exposed, like Daniels鈥 green roofs are, you have to be thoughtful that those kinds of seeds could blow in and try to grow.鈥

The Community Commons was constructed after Denver voters passed a green roof law in 2017. That ordinance required all new buildings of a certain size to have green spaces鈥攁 rule that was later updated to include additional forms of sustainable construction, including solar panels. Rodgers says that when the green roof ordinance was passed, 快活app鈥檚 plans for the Community Commons building already included sustainable characteristics that met the city鈥檚 new requirements.

鈥淲e did definitely pay attention to the green roof ordinance,鈥 Rodgers says. 鈥淲e also definitely applaud the effort of the city and citizens of Denver, both to vote it in, but also to work with it to make it an effective way to address the growing concerns about the urban environment.鈥

When envisioning the green roof, Rodgers and his team considered other locations, among them the Burwell Center for Career Achievement and the Dimond Family Residential Village. The team landed on the Community Commons after determining that it would see the most use from 快活app faculty, students and staff.

鈥淭hen it could be a signature element that, actually, would programmatically enhance the program that [would be] on the fourth floor of that building,鈥 Rodgers says.

Given the Mile High City鈥檚 sometimes unforgiving climate, building and maintaining an urban green space presents formidable challenges. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, most of Denver is classified as a 鈥5b鈥 on the department鈥檚 plant hardiness rankings. This means that, due to Denver鈥檚 erratic winters, characterized by 100-plus freeze-thaw cycles, it鈥檚 difficult to find plants that will thrive鈥攁nd remain attractive鈥攜ear-round.听

鈥淲e see dramatic temperature changes, where quite literally it will be 70 degrees out, and less than eight hours later, it鈥檚 below freezing for a length of time,鈥 Rodgers says. 鈥淎nd a lot of non-native plants struggle with that.鈥

With that in mind, Rodgers and his team worked hard to make sure the green space on the Community Commons roof featured a diverse array of native plant species that can evolve as seasons change and the years march on.听

鈥淲e wanted a beautiful pattern. And we wanted to express a lot of things with it and provide an educational opportunity,鈥 Rodgers says. 鈥淏ut we also wanted to make sure folks realize that over time, some species may thrive in certain locations, and others may thrive in other areas, and that there will be a gentle and maybe purposeful migration of where different plant species end up doing their best.鈥