Insulation on global climate change

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Green Roofs

Green Roofs in Toronto (©City of Toronto)

Another example of housing that reduces heat loss is green roofs. Green roofs are roofs on top of buildings that have vegetation such as plants (which take in CO2 and release O2) on the roof. This helps reduce heat loss because the vegetation plugs most holes in the roof, preventing it from escaping the buildings. Another great feature of green roofs is that it can use the heat and light from the sun above the building to convert carbon dioxide (a greenhouse gas that causes global climate change) into oxygen (that we breathe). This causes the building to be cool in summer since the heat from the sun is absorbed by the plants and replaced by less carbon dioxide and more oxygen. In winter, the building becomes warmer because it blocks heat from inside the building from escaping. Green roofs also work during winter with a little glass greenhouse for the plants.

Intensive vs Extensive Green Roofs (©Government of Canada)

There are two types of green roofs - extensive and intensive. Intensive roofs have more soil and more precipitation and therefore more favorable conditions for plants, but costs more and may require infrastructural changes to the building. Extensive roofs have little soil and little precipitation and therefore stressful conditions for plants, but costs less and is very easy to maintain because less maintenance work is required on the plants.

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Did you know?

... water evaporates from walls which are glazed with air or straw quicker than it does from steel walls.