By now, many architects can tout the benefits of green roofs, but few know which plants are actually suitable for topping buildings. A green-roof designer, horticulturist, or landscape architect will typically do the heavy lifting of choosing the cultivars based on factors such as climate, roof height, sun and wind exposure, and aesthetics. But knowing your options may help ensure the endurance of your green roof, and also uncover creative ways to enhance your building design and program.
White Stonecrop (Sedum album)
Good for: Year-round color
Zon…
White Stonecrop (Sedum album)
Good for: Year-round color
Zone: 5 to 8
Height: 2 to 6 inches
Sun: Full
Blooms: Varies
Tolerant of shallow planting media and intense sunlight, sedums are frequently used on green roofs. The hardy, low-growing plants come in many varieties, says Jennifer Bousselot, a former researcher at Iowa State and Colorado State universities. “Depending on the cultivar, the winter colors are endless—ranging from orange to pink to yellow.”
Ted Bodner@USDA-NRCS Plants Database/James H. Miller and Karl V. Miller
Prickly Pear (Opuntia humifusa)
Good for: Color and low mainten…
Prickly Pear (Opuntia humifusa)
Good for: Color and low maintenance
Zone: 2 to 10
Height: 8 inches
Sun: Full
Blooms: May to July
No “plant it and forget it” species exists, Bousselot says, but the prickly pear comes close. Its drawbacks include pedestrian-unfriendly spines and slow growth, but it can endure frigid climates. Native and widespread in the eastern U.S., it produces waxy yellow flowers that are followed by edible fruit.
Walter Siegmund
Nodding Onion (Allium cernuum)
Good for: Year-round color
Zo…
Nodding Onion (Allium cernuum)
Good for: Year-round color
Zone: 4 to 8
Height: 1 to 3 feet
Sun: Full
Blooms: June to August
For use in milder climates, this evergreen plant adds height and interest to roof gardens, Bousselot says. “It has grasslike but thick leaves with a beautiful flower. Its flower head dries and creates excellent winter interest.” Once abundant on the Chicago River banks, the plant features edible leaves, bulbs, and bulblets.
Andrew Massyn
Hardy Ice plant (Delosperma cooperi)Good for: Year-round color
…
Hardy Ice plant (Delosperma cooperi)Good for: Year-round color
Zone: 7 to 10
Height: 3 to 6 inches
Sun: Full
Blooms: June to September
Though it requires a well-drained substrate, this fast-growing plant has succulent foliage that turns purple in the winter, Bousselot says. Suitable as a ground cover, it produces fuchsia flowers from late spring until the first frost. However, as a native of Southern Africa, it is not reliably winter hardy north of zone 7.
Derek Ramsey
Hens and Chicks (Sempervivum spp.)
Good for: Low-maintenance
…
Hens and Chicks (Sempervivum spp.)
Good for: Low-maintenance
Zone: 3 to 8
Height: 3 to 6 inches
Sun: Full
This plant lives up to its Latin name sempervivum, which means to live forever. Though hens and chicks can take longer to establish than sedums, the payoff is worth it once the plants take root. Not only are the evergreen succulents drought resistant and low-maintenance, but they also provide color, producing purple-red flowers in midsummer.
Pavel Kacl
Middendorf Stonecrop (Sedum middendorffianum)
Good for: Roofs w…
Middendorf Stonecrop (Sedum middendorffianum)
Good for: Roofs without irrigation
Zone: 3 to 9
Height: 8 to 10 inches
Sun: Full
Blooms: Summer
Well suited for roofs with limited additional load capacity, this colorful sedum tolerates soil depths as shallow as 1 to 3 inches, says Kristin Getter, a floriculture outreach specialist at Michigan State University (MSU). White Stonecrop is another option, but it does not withstand hot summers, Getter says.
Robin Carlson/Chicago Botanic Garden
Prairie Dropseed (Sporobolus Heterolepis)
Good for: Kid-friendl…
Prairie Dropseed (Sporobolus Heterolepis)
Good for: Kid-friendly, high-traffic areas
Zone: 3 to 9
Height: 2 to 3 feet
Sun: Full
Blooms: August to October
This plant, native to Chicago, produces pink flowers with brown tints in the late summer. Its foliage turns gold and orange in the fall and fades to light bronze in the winter. “The grass … has a strong fragrance in late summer into early fall that has been likened to popcorn,” says Chicago Botanic Garden horticulturist Emily Shelton.
Robin Carlson/Chicago Botanic Garden
Creeping Phlox (Phlox subulata)
Good for: Kid-friendly, high-tr…
Creeping Phlox (Phlox subulata)
Good for: Kid-friendly, high-traffic areas
Zone: 3 to 9
Height: 6 feet
Sun: Full sun to partial shade
The Chicago Botanic Garden is examining the durability of this semi-evergreen ground cover, which grows into a dense mat, Shelton says. “It can handle some foot traffic and is a carpet of blooms in the spring”—good news for a plant that must withstand frigid winters, frequent handling by students, and up to 1 million annual visitors to the garden’s Daniel F. and Ada L. Rice Plant Conservation Science Center.
Stan Shebs
Stonecrop (Sedum kamtschaticum)
Good for: Storing carbon
Zon…
Stonecrop (Sedum kamtschaticum)
Good for: Storing carbon
Zone: 4 to 9
Height: 6 to 12 inches
Sun: Full sun to partial shade
Blooms: Early summer
All plants store carbon, but some are more effective than others, says MSU horticulture professor Brad Rowe. Carbon storage potential is directly related to biomass—for example, a tree will store more than a perennial. Stonecrop, Rowe says, is a larger rooftop plant that can be planted in shallow soil. It produces long-lasting, half-inch yellow flowers.
Adamantios
Ornamental Onion (Allium senescens)
Good for: High-salinity env…
Ornamental Onion (Allium senescens)
Good for: High-salinity environments
Zone: 4 to 8
Height: 6 to 8 inches
Sun: Full sun to partial shade
Blooms: Mid to late summer
In coastal applications and on roofs in which de-icers are used, plants that can tolerate high salinity are a must. In his research, Rowe has found ornamental onions to be very salt tolerant. With blue-green leaves that smell like onion when bruised, the plant grows in clumps and produces lilac-pink flowers.
Amit Bansal
Mint (Mentha)
Good for: Bulk food source
Zone: 3 to 10
He…
Mint (Mentha)
Good for: Bulk food source
Zone: 3 to 10
Height: 1 to 4 feet
Sun: Full sun to partial shade
For the Ledge Kitchen & Drinks restaurant in Dorchester, Mass., Recover Green Roofs worked with Green City Growers to create a rooftop kitchen garden, whose abundance of produce includes mint—traditional, chocolate, pineapple, spearmint, and peppermint. The fast-growing, continually harvestable plant is “easy to apply to a menu,” said Recover project manager Brendan Shea.
Rob Hille
Two-Row Stonecrop (Sedum spurium)
Good for: Storing carbon
Z…
Two-Row Stonecrop (Sedum spurium)
Good for: Storing carbon
Zone: 4 to 9
Height: 2 to 6 inches
Sun: Full sun to partial shade
Blooms: Summer
Rowe also pointed to this sedum variety as another excellent carbon-storage plant that can grow in shallow planting soils. The semi-evergreen sedum produces white or purplish star-shaped flowers in the summer. Its foliage turns burgundy in the fall. Like Stonecrop, the plant also provides good ground cover.
Plant selection depends on a few factors. First, a project team should determine what type of green roof is best suited to its project: intensive or extensive. Intensive green roofs have deeper planting media depths and are similar to traditional landscaping. Extensive green roofs, designed to boost building performance and environmental sustainability, use shallower depths and require less maintenance.
Next, teams should consider their roof’s microclimate, which is determined by several factors, including average temperatures, wind levels, sun intensity, and rainfall. The U.S. Department of Agriculture publishes its Plant Hardiness Zone Map (planthardiness.ars.usda.gov) based on the average annual minimum winter temperatures, divided into 10-degree zones; lower-numbered zones are colder.
However, depending on roof height, the conditions on top of buildings may be very different from conditions on grade. Rooftops may require plants suited to a different zone than the landscaping planted several stories below on ground level does. Green Roofs for Healthy Cities offers a database of green-roof professionals (greenroofs.org/index.php/find-greenroofprofessional), who can help sort out the technicalities of selecting plants for rooftops.
Jennifer Brite is a design journalist and public-health scientist who is currently pursuing a doctorate in public health with a concentration in epidemiology and demography at the City University of New York. For ARCHITECT, she writes about new products and sustainable design.