Tokyo turns to rooftop gardens to beat the heat
Thursday, August 08, 2002
By Chang-Ran Kim, Reuters
TOKYO -- At a run-down three-story office block in downtown Tokyo, government clerks and secretaries cool off among azaleas, hydrangeas, and even blueberry bushes during coffee breaks, seemingly far away from the sweltering urban heat.
The garden is not a perk for bureaucrats or reckless use of taxes in a city with some of the world's priciest real estate. It's on the roof and, what's more, it's saving money.
The oasis is the brainchild of Kazuyoshi Kojima, a 52-year-old public servant spearheading the drive to lower temperatures in Japan's cities. Trapped by concrete and asphalt, the heat from heavy traffic and millions of air-conditioning units have made summer in the cities hotter -- a phenomenon known as the "heat-island effect."
"The rooftop garden helps to absorb heat and keeps temperatures inside the building lower," Kojima said. "We used to set the air-conditioner at 68 degrees, and it was still unbearably hot," he said. With the garden up top, a higher setting or as much as 82 was fine.
Similarly, in the winter the building only needs one hour of heating; for the rest of the day the heat is contained, significantly reducing electricity costs.
The drive to cool down Tokyo's summers comes not a moment too soon. Last month, the temperature in the city of 12 million averaged 82 degrees, almost three degrees higher than it was in the same month 30 years ago. In 1972, there was just one day in July when the temperature did not fall under 77 degrees, compared with 15 days this year.
Plenty of ideas have been suggested to beat the heat, including one that would involve running cool water through a huge labyrinth of pipes under the city. But that could be years away, and the scheme could possibly damage the fragile marine ecosystem as the warmed water is dumped back into the sea.
IT'S THE LAW
Assigned to tackle the heat-island phenomenon for Tokyo's Shibuya ward two years ago, Kojima helped draw up legislation requiring new buildings bigger than 3,230 square feet at ground level to plant gardens on one-fifth of that surface.
That mandate is the strictest in the country and has paid off so visibly that even the Tokyo city government is reconsidering its regulations in the hope of emulating Shibuya's success. Lately he even gets phone calls from embassies inquiring about the project, Kojima said.
Tokyo passed its law in April 2001 stipulating that new buildings with a roof area of more than 10,765 square feet must plant greenery on 20 percent of the surface. To get around the costly task, however, many builders have slanted their roofs because the guideline applies only to flat surfaces.
Under its plan, the capital hopes to add 2,965 acres of greenery on its rooftops over 15 years. At the pace it's going now, that could take up to 120 years.
Shibuya, one of Tokyo's 23 wards, is way ahead of schedule. When it first started, the ward, with a population of about 200,000, set a goal of increasing its total green surface to 23 percent from the current 21.1 percent over 20 years. In the six months since the guidelines became legally binding last October, it reached the halfway point.
"We'll have to reset our targets now, since our rooftops are being planted at such a high speed," Kojima said. Kojima believes the secret of his success lies in his unorthodox ideas and penchant for risk-taking.
When he was handed the mission two years ago, he could not tell a cherry tree and plum tree apart, he admitted. But to give builders an idea of what the ward was asking, he set up a model on the ward office's own rooftop. His budget was zero and he had no assistants. Undaunted, Kojima walked around asking companies for help.
He eventually found 29 willing firms and succeeded in converting the bare rooftop into a green oasis for free. "Rooftop gardening is the sort of thing anyone can do if they put their minds to it," Kojima said. "It really doesn't have to cost that much money."
Copyright 2002, Reuters
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