Case Study: Living Wall at Queens University of Charlotte

By Nancy Tamosaitis-Thompson

Founded in 1857, Queens University of Charlotte, is a private, co-ed university located in Charlotte, North Carolina. The university serves approximately 2,400 undergraduate and graduate students through its College of Arts and Sciences; McColl School of Business; Blair College of Health; Wayland H. Cato, Jr. School of Education; the James L. Knight School of Communications; and the Hayworth College for Adult Studies.

“As we add academic programs and extracurricular activities to meet the needs of our expanding student body, we’re also working hard to improve our beautiful campus,” said Bill Nichols, vice president, campus planning & services for Queens University of Charlotte, who has been overseeing the design and construction of the new $18 million Rogers Science and Health Building. “While remaining faithful to our beautiful Georgian style, we sought to invigorate and inspire our campus and add design elements that were not only visually compelling but educational too.”

Nichols, who ran his own architectural firm prior to joining Queens University, hired Little Diversified Architectural Consulting in May 2010 to create the construction documents. Matthews Construction was brought aboard in May 2011 to oversee the construction.

Challenge

“Queens University of Charlotte has a very established architectural tradition,” said Philip A. Kuttner, AIA, LEED, BD+C and chief executive officer of Little. “For the design of Queens’ Rogers Science and Health building, we sought to respect tradition while bringing aboard a modern twist which celebrated environmental science.

“We considered many sculptural ideas, and were captivated by the building’s greenhouse where students will be able to monitor plant growth conditions and environmental factors in ways not possible in a traditional laboratory. After some deliberation, we proposed the addition of an exterior green wall, which we felt could be visually compelling, environmentally responsible and also serve as an educational tool.”

Dr. Reed Perkins of the Environmental Science Department immediately embraced the green wall concept as a key teaching tool for his students in the Rogers Building. “A living wall can offer an opportunity for our students to truly live science, not just learn what others have done.

Before

During
Photos courtesy of Queens University of Charlotte

From the beginning, the faculty wanted even the most casual observers of the university to see that this building was a place of science, discovery and imagination.”

“We recommended Ambius to install this living wall, as they had vast experience designing and installing some of the expansive living walls ever created,” said Kuttner,

Ambius was hired in the fall of 2011, and the lead designers for the project were Denise Eichmann, and Mark Hawry. Eichmann is internationally recognized for the design and construction of uniquely challenging, one-of-a-kind sustainable landscape projects with award winning expertise on the design, construction and installation of vertical gardens and living walls.

“Dr. Perkins was the originator of the green wall’s plant pattern, which is a DNA double helix strand which highlights a DNA strand made of evergreen so that it stays green all year round, as well as seasonal changes with evergreen and flowering plants,” said Eichmann. “Working with Dr. Perkins, his colleagues, and the architect firm, we produced four drawings with recommended plant species and plant design for the spring, summer, fall and winter living wall prototype.”

“Part of our green wall message is that DNA is always with us, and as the DNA strand is made of evergreen, we have a living statement that the fundamentals of life are always with us,” said Perkins.

“It was important that the plant species were noninvasive, and we labeled plants as ‘red light’ (too invasive or not indigenous), ‘yellow light’ as possible contenders and ‘green light’ as our top recommendations,” said Eichmann. “After the plants were selected, we started the design and plant-acquisition process.”

“The plants were all grown at the Twixwood Nursery in Berrien Springs, Michigan,” said Nichols. “Steel panels were plugged in with the different plant species which remained in the nursery for 16 weeks to grow into their panels. After 16 weeks, they were shipped to our site for the Ambius team to install.”

“A vertical green wall is an unnatural growth environment for plants in terms of drainage, solar input, and other factors,” said Perkins. “Plants that do well in high-stress environments are often invasive. Ambius worked collaboratively with us, patiently and enthusiastically, to identify plants that were able to tolerate those unique conditions and not disrupt the surrounding vegetation communities. We weren’t so much concerned that the plants were native to North Carolina (that’s a really tough designation to pin down, anyway), as with whether the plants would invade the surrounding landscape (i.e., be the next kudzu or autumn olive).”

Solution

“We have an underground irrigation system that captures rainwater,” said Nichols. “The irrigation system for the green wall is quite complex with the wall broken out into seven different irrigation zones.”

“The top zone is the most exposed and requires the most water,” said Eichmann. “We established a system where each zone was watered separately from each other taking advantage of the university’s underground irrigation system and ensuring that each zone was appropriately watered.”

The installation of the green wall took about two weeks. “It was fascinating to watch the installation process,” said Nichols. “The wall is 24 feet wide and 35 feet tall, and there were 693 standard panels and several custom panels, so ensuring that the right plant was placed in the proper place was crucial. Each plant container was numbered, and Ambius followed their chart which showed exactly where to put each container on the wall.”

“The living wall features 14 plant species including Carex (sedges), Polystrichum (Christmas fern) Heuchera (coral bells), Sedum (stonecrop), English Lavender, Gelsemium (yellow jasmine) and Hellebore (Lenten rose),” said Eichmann.

“Ambius was able to deliver a truly turnkey system and were great partners to work with,” said Michael Heavner, project manager, Matthews Construction. “We had never been involved with a green wall of this size and magnitude before, and were happy to report that the system was installed and working beautifully just as projected.”

Results

“This living wall at our Platinum LEED-certified facility is now directly involved in teaching about environmental conservation,” said Dr. Perkins. “Queens University of Charlotte is demonstrating conservation, as the abundance of green design features ensures that students learn both in and from the building. Its green wall features non-invasive plants which keep the building cool. The students understand how living walls come complete with their own ‘life support’ system, which is comprised of a supporting structure to hold the plants vertically, a growth medium to ensure plant longevity, an irrigation/fertilization system to deliver the correct amount of water and nutrients, and a drainage system to properly re-circulate the spent water.

They understand how proper selection and design of a system for a particular locale necessitates plumbing and electrical considerations.”

“This living wall at Rogers Science and Health building serves as the front porch of the university,” added Perkins.

Nancy Tamosaitis-Thompson is with Vorticom, Inc., New York, N.Y.

For more information about the parties involved with this project, visit the following:

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