flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Living green wall planned for InterContinental Chicago

Living green wall planned for InterContinental Chicago

Project, with price tag of $2 million to $3 million, needs council approval.


By By Melissa Harris | June 25, 2012
Chicago is known for its green roofs but has few green walls, a trend that began
Chicago is known for its green roofs but has few green walls, a trend that began in the late 1980s in France.

Laurence Geller, the blunt-talking British chief executive of Strategic Hotels & Resorts, plans to literally spruce up the facade of the InterContinental Chicago hotel on North Michigan Avenue with a 9,800-sf living green wall.

The wall, which requires City Council approval, would be covered in thousands of plants growing year-round in concealed trays hung perpendicular to the wall. It would be the largest wall of its kind in North America and one of a handful in Chicago, according to Geller and Anne Roberts, the local landscape designer he has hired to build it.

"Unless you start glamoring this thing up, it will never look iconic," Geller said of the two-tower hotel, which Chicago-based Strategic owns. The green wall "will make this North Tower disappear."

Why, I asked, was that tower built with so few windows?

"Because it was built stupidly — cheaply and stupidly some 30-odd-years ago," Geller said. "I don't know what was in anyone's head."

Ald. Brendan Reilly, whose ward includes North Michigan Avenue, said he would introduce an ordinance authorizing the wall and other improvements to the hotel's exterior — awnings, a larger patio to the north, additional lighting — as early as July. The wall will wrap around about 10 of the North Tower's 26 stories and will be lit at night.

"I can't image this will be considered controversial," Reilly said. "Otherwise, it is a pretty unattractive blank wall."

If the council approves the project, Geller expects the frame will be finished this winter and the plants hung by spring. He estimates all of the improvements will cost $2 million to $3 million and hopes the wall will draw more customers.

"We're going to do it because it's right, and we may make a lot of money," he said. "All I need is a quarter-point (more) of market share to get a 20 percent return. And if I don't get it, I don't get it, but at least I'll have made the building better."

Chicago is known for its green roofs but has few green walls, a trend that began in the late 1980s in France. Like green roofs, living walls scrub the air and provide insulation, thereby lowering electricity costs.

But Geller said his water bill likely will increase. Roberts is going to try to water the wall with rain collected on the InterContinental's roof, but she admitted it would not meet all of the garden's needs.

The scarcity of green walls here, experts say, is due to cost and climate. The new Rivers Casino in Des Plaines has a small indoor one, and the Chicago Botanic Garden's new children's garden has four outdoor walls that cover about 670 square feet total.

The far larger project Geller envisions was once thought impossible in Chicago.

"At one time, way back at the beginning of Millennium Park, we considered a Jeff Koons-style puppy made of plants," said Donna La Pietra, the head of Millennium Park Inc., the park's fundraising arm. "The first question we had was, 'Are you sure?' The next was, 'What's going to happen in the winter?' That has always been the thorny question. What kinds of materials can one use? But for almost every challenge that gets raised in the Midwest about plant materials, someone finds a solution. Now we have much more tolerant plants."

Roberts, who has never constructed a green wall, has yet to finalize the hybrids she will use but said evergreens and native plants will be part of the mix. She is working with Rochester, N.Y.-based Green Living Technologies International, which has experience and built the walls at the botanic garden.

Before hanging the plants, Roberts will grow them indoors and slowly rotate them over several months to a 90-degree angle.

"They have to be oriented to that condition before they're put on the wall," she said.

Roberts and her team will control the wall's plastic irrigation system from an off-site computer. When the temperature dips below freezing, the system will be drained. Maintenance will be necessary two to three times per year and done in a similar manner to window-washing. Workers will dangle from the roof to trim and replace plants.

"This is horticulture to the 100th degree," Roberts said. "It's infinitely much harder to figure out what's going to grow on a wall. And this wall will face west, meaning very, very hot in the summer, and is near the lake, meaning high winds."

Geller said the first year will be "trial and error and effort" — "we'll over-irrigate and kill some (plants)," he warned. But if it succeeds, he believes tourists will flock to photograph it and that will propel more business.

"I think Michigan Avenue is old-fashioned in the way its retailing is," said Geller, who praised only the Crate & Barrel store and a Burberry store that is under construction. "Unless architecture meets retailing, retailing will never be successful."

A bolder Michigan Avenue would attract more tourists, and, he added, "I'd make more money." +

Related Stories

Sponsored | | Oct 29, 2014

What’s the difference between your building’s coating chalking and fading?

While the reasons for chalk and fade are different, both occurrences are something to watch for. SPONSORED CONTENT

Sponsored | | Oct 29, 2014

Historic Washington elementary school incorporates modular design

More and more architects and designers are leveraging modern modular building techniques for expansion projects planned on historical sites. SPONSORED CONTENT

| Oct 29, 2014

Diller Scofidio + Renfro selected to design Olympic Museum in Colorado Springs

The museum is slated for an early 2018 completion, and will include a hall of fame, theater, retail space, and a 20,000-sf hall that will showcase the history of the Olympics and Paralympics.

Smart Buildings | Oct 29, 2014

SCAPE’s 'living breakwaters' resiliency development wins 2014 Buckminster Fuller Challenge

New York-based landscape architecture firm SCAPE won the Buckminster Fuller Institute’s 2014 Fuller Challenge, billed as socially responsible design’s highest award.

| Oct 28, 2014

4 keys to mastering 'design thinking' and the iteration process

When using design thinking and iteration, we’ll sometimes spend multiple days iterating idea after idea, heads down, only to realize we still don’t have it right, writes HDR's Amy Lussetto. She offers tips for success with these idea-nurturing tools.

| Oct 28, 2014

Miami accepts more modest plan to renovate its convention center

The city of Miami has awarded an $11 million contract for its on-again, off-again convention center renovation to Denver-based Fentress Architects, which will serve as the design criteria professional on this project.

| Oct 28, 2014

Kean University creates Michael Graves School of Architecture

Winner of the AIA Gold Medal, the National Medal of the Arts, the Topaz Medallion and the Driehaus Prize for Architecture, Graves is best known for his contemporary building designs and prominent public commissions.

| Oct 27, 2014

Davis, Calif., latest city to join race to develop 'innovation hubs'

The city plans to develop two "innovation centers" with a total of seven million sf of commercial space geared for local research and technology companies.

| Oct 27, 2014

Report estimates 1.2 million people experience LEED-certified retail centers daily

The "LEED In Motion: Retail" report includes USGBC’s conceptualization of the future of retail, emphasizing the economic and social benefit of green building for retailers of all sizes and types.

| Oct 27, 2014

Top 10 green building products for 2015

Among the breakthrough products to make BuildingGreen's annual Top-10 Green Building Products list are halogen-free polyiso insulation and a high-flow-rate biofiltration system.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Warehouses

California bill would limit where distribution centers can be built

A bill that passed the California legislature would limit where distribution centers can be located and impose other rules aimed at reducing air pollution and traffic. Assembly Bill 98 would tighten building standards for new warehouses and ban heavy diesel truck traffic next to sensitive sites including homes, schools, parks and nursing homes.




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021