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Monday - September 13, 2010
From: Houston, TX
Region: Southwest
Topic: Plant Lists, Soils, Green Roofs
Title: Need Plants and Soil for a Green Roof in Buffalo, TX
Answered by: Marilyn Kircus
QUESTION:
I'm building a green roof on my cabin in the Buffalo, Texas, area. Would you know what soil and plants would be best suited for that area? I have a lot of sand I could use, but didn't know if that would sustain a grass cover.ANSWER:
Let’s start with the question of soil first. It should be as light as possible so you can make it as deep as possible without stressing your support system. The maximum amount of native soil that is recommended is 1/3 clean topsoil, mixed with 1/3 compost, and 1/3 perlite or other inorganic material. This was discussed in the FAQ’s on greenroofs.You may even want to reduce the amount of compost in the mix since the natives you'll be using don't require much organic materials in the soil. Also it will break down over time and you will end up with less total soil. Finally, the organic material can pollute the run-off. In this case, you would probably want more perlite and less compost. This was a recommedation of Mark Simmons Ph.D., who is the head of green roof research at the Wildflower Center.
In a Houston, Texas experiment, the Schlindler Company’s landscape architect used a mix of 70% perlite and 30% packing peanuts and says she thinks a 50/50 mix would work just as well. She just put the peanuts on the bottom and the perlite on the top. She added a soluble organic fertilizer once a week and got dramatically heavy growth on her plants. And the plants made a strong matrix of roots which prevented any of them from being blown over. This is also the very lightest soil solution.
You will have to do your own research and match the engineered soil to your load limits. Also consider if you will have a drip irrigation system that makes it easy to add a liquid fertilizer or not, and consider the cost of various materials. From personal experience, I can recommend that you could also add the packing peanuts to a mix of topsoil, perlite, and compost. I used to use peanuts in a mix to start tomatoes and the peanuts encouraged many more roots to form which helped the plants resist stress better. The peanuts seemed to work that way in this study as well.
The Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center is involved with research on the best plants for people in Texas to use. Sedums don’t do well here, although they are the plants of choice in other places. Here is the list of plants recommended for green roofs. You can use various combinations of them whether you plan to have an extensive or intensive greenroof. Click on each plant to get a full description of it. But be sure and use several different species to keep the entire roof healthier and to prevent the lost of all your plants from some disease. This information was also in the FAQ’s referenced above. You mentioned using grasses so you might want to narrow your search - see the side pannel to grasses/grass-like in the habit selection.
Here are some greenroof projects from Texas.You will have to use the search engiine to look for Texas projects as I don't get a new URL when I search.
And for a complete discussion of building, planting, and maintainig greenroofs, see Green Roof Construction and Maintenance. Luckett, Kelly. GreenSource Books. Mcgraw-Hill's Greensource.
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