A living wall, also referred to as a green wall, vertical garden, or sky farm, is usually part of a building and consists of some sort of vegetation. These types of gardens are sometimes referred to as urban gardening, because they are well-suited for an urban environment where space on the ground is very limited but vertical space is plentiful. These vertical gardens can be quite spectacular in appearance, and in some cases, they even work to filter clean air into the building in which they are growing upon...
Vertical gardens can be grown on just about any type of wall, with or without the use of soil, and they can be placed both on outdoor and indoor walls. As long as there is not shortage of water for the living wall, no soil is required. These amazing sky farms are able to literally bring life to an old rundown building in the middle of the city and they are becoming increasingly popular inside office buildings, homes, and retail stores because of their outstanding beauty and their natural air purification properties.
Living walls have fast become an art form for many people, and one of the pioneering vertical garden artists is Patrick Blanc. He observed how plants were able to grow vertically without the need for soil in the wild, and soon developed a way to create artistic looking vegetation walls that were both lightweight and needed little maintenance. Since these living walls only weighed approximately 30 kg or less per square-meter, he noticed that just about any type of wall would be able to support the weight of a vertical garden. There are many amazing examples of vertical gardens around the world. Here's our list of some of the most creative and beautiful living walls in the world. We may have missed some of course, but please feel free to drop any we’ve missed in the comments.
Musee du quai Branly, Paris, France
This popular French museum near the Eiffel Tower in Paris is home to one of the best examples of vertical garden work by artist Patrick Blanc. The living wall here is about 200 meters long and 12 meters tall.
Musee du quai Branly, Paris
The museum's living exterior was at one time healthy and vibrant, but today you can see signs of the inadequate support for irrigation and drainage of the garden – although it still remains breathtakingly beautiful.
Sky Farm, Las Vegas
A proposed $200 million sky farm in the city of Las Vegas would be the world's first 30-story vertical farm. This building would have 30 floors of indoor farm land, and it is estimated that a vertical farm such as this one could produce enough food to feed 72,000 people per year.
Las Vegas Sky Farm
This proposed vertical sky farm would grow approximately 100 different crops, and would bring in an estimated $40 million in annual revenue via produce sales and tourism to the one-of-a-kind structure. This sky farm is only in the preliminary stages of design, and it could quite a while before this awesome vertical farm is actually built (if ever).
SkyFarm, Toronto, Canada
A new vertical farm in the downtown area of Toronto, called SkyFarm, could help to feed 35,000 area residents each year. The advantage of the SkyFarm is that the proposed building would only require about 1.32 hectares of land for the 58 story building to sit on.
Toronto SkyFarm
However it s will have about 8 million square-feet of growing space for crops, bringing in the same amount of produce as a 420 hectar farm. The 714 feet structure would bring in an estimated $23 million of revenue each year.
Residence Antilia, Mumbai, India
This new eco-building is scheduled to be completed by the end of 2008, and upon its completion will hold the world record for the largest and tallest living wall, not just in India, but on the planet. This 200 meter tall building, called Residence Antilia, will feature vertical gardens all the way up its exterior walls.
Residence Antiliam Mumbai
Costing, $1 billion, the revolutionary design will make it not only the world's greenest skyscraper, but also one of the most unique and beautiful structures in the world.
Parabienta Living Wall System, Japan
This living wall is manufactured and marketed by two Japanese companies that have created a product that is lightweight, cheap, and very functional. The living wall is called 'Parabienta', and it costs approximately $60 per square foot.
Parabienta Living Wall, Japan
This eco-friendly wall will significantly cool down a building through a naturally occurring cooling process that takes place within the plants – otherwise known as shade.
Foundation Cartier, Paris
Paris, France – A Vertical Garden Mecca
The 'city of love' is a sort of vertical garden hotspot, and it's becoming increasingly popular and mainstream to 'decorate' a bland wall with a plethora of beautiful plants, whether it be for artistic purposes or for more functional eco-friendly intentions. Much of the reason that Paris is such a vertical garden mecca is the fact that one of the founding fathers of the art form, Patrick Blanc, lives there. He, and other living wall artists have created some amazing vertical gardens in France's capital city.
Foundation Cartier
The plant wall at the entrance of the Foundation Cartier has not been trimmed since it was planted back in 1998. The only maintenance of this beautiful garden involves a gardener coming in about every 2-3 months to remove dead leaves, or whole plants, and replace them with new ones.
BHV Homme, Paris
The vertical garden at this popular Parisian department store literally adds life to the back of BHV Homme in Paris.
BVH Homme
This artistic living wall at almost resembles an abstract painting from afar.
Pershing Hall Hotel, Paris
Nestled in the courtyard of the Pershing Hall Hotel is a 30 meter high vertical garden that features over 250 different plant species...
Pershing Hall Hotel
It's quite a site, to say the least!
Club Med Champs-Elysees, Paris
The small vertical garden at this Club Med in Paris is designed to represent plants from five different continents. The addition of the vertical garden at this Club Med location is all part of a plan to create a more upscale feel for the already first-class resort. The garden is visible from outside and is beautifully lit at night.
CaixaForum, Madrid, Spain
As the newest museum in Madrid, CaixaForum certainly takes innovation to the next level before you even walk into the place.
Caixaforum, Madrid
One of the exterior walls features a huge 24 meter high vertical garden with over 15,000 plants from more than 250 different species. This artistic display is one of the finest examples of living walls anywhere in Spain.
Vertical Gardens, Bangkok, Thailand
The vertical gardening phenomenon is spreading like wildfire across the globe, and it's no different in Bangkok, Thailand.
Bangkok vertical gardens
Check out these photos of two great examples of vertical gardening. This and the previous photo are of the Siam Paragon Shopping Center...
Vertical gardens in Bangkok
And this photo shows a cool example of how strategically placing plants vertically alongside an elevator shaft at the Emporium Bangkok can add a nice decorative touch.
Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao, Spain
In front of the Guggenheim Art Museum you'll find an awesome example of vertical gardening in the depiction of a puppy made entirely out of plants.
Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao
The artist, Jeff Koons, created this 43-foot tall “plant puppy” in the mid-1990s using a steel substructure and a variety of plants. The detail of this piece is amazing.
ACROS Fukuoka Prefectural International Hall, Japan
The 100,000 square foot rooftop at the ACROS Fukuoka building is definitely one of a kind. The 18 story building features 15 stepped terraces that can actually be climbed to the top.
ACROS Fukuoka Prefectural, Japan
The terraces are meant to promote a serene and peaceful environment in the middle of the city with lots green plants and even waterfalls and small pools to add to the calming effect of the building's extraordinary exterior
Living Walls, Netherlands
This building is a great example of how you can spice up a boring exterior and turn it into a living and breathing wall. The plants are growing in a thin layer of felt and rock wool material instead of soil. Recycled rain water is pumped through this material to provide nutrients to the root systems of the plants.


jerby (not verified) says:
newyork could really use some of this ideas...

Toby (not verified) says:
I don't see how some of those skyscraper farms would work.. how would they get light to all of the levels?

Loren (not verified) says:
Maybe you could grow some weed on one of the levels and noone would notice?



Alan (not verified) says:
Here is a vertical garden at the Caixa Forum in Madrid, Spain:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/9167719@N07/2288963522/


mark (not verified) says:
the process with the plants that produces the cooling effect is not "shade" although the shade does provide some cooling, it actually is called "transpriation", it is the process of the plant taking in water and air, and exhaling thru the leaves that causes the cooling, kind of like a living "evaporative cooler"

Maple3 (not verified) says:
Wow! This is really th future! Simply love this especially the Toronto Sky Farm.

Luke (not verified) says:
it looks like design is preempting the post-human world. gorgeous stuff, makes traditional vine coverings look oh so passe...


Harry (not verified) says:
I love this idea. I've been trying to promote its use in the city I live in but so far no one is willing to try it.
I guess I need to do more research on techniques and such. I'll definitely be looking into the one company that was mentioned.

Ziyaad (not verified) says:
salams (peace) this technique is definitely the way forward, as more and more people from rural populations in the developing world as well as all the overpopulated cities we have over here, are in dire need of an overhaul of the land use, all those old buildings could be 'spruced up' bringing our cities into the 221st century. harry this is one idea i am also hoping to implement as a project-funding and all, pray it happens.

jws (not verified) says:
super!!
check out singapore changi airport terminal 3 -- green wall 50 ft high by 1,000 feet long is the centerpiece of the terminal building.

Bea Elliott (not verified) says:
And that's what the future should look like! Let's eliminate polluting and cruel animal agriculture - launch ourselves into the 21st century with plenty of sustainable (and healthy) food for all! Go Vegan!

Stephen (not verified) says:
I really want to see this project succeed because I think this is could be a solution to are rising food shortage…I am trying to get the first working tower built: http://www.thepoint.com/campaigns/vertical-farm-in-new-york-city


Pavel Agafonov the Artist (not verified) says:
That is absolutely amazing. So finally we have an alternative to a grey wall – green wall art.

Mary (not verified) says:
The walls with living plants are pretty, but can be distructive to the brick, morter and other construction of the buildings. I know as English Ivy can grow right thru the grout on windows.

Adam Lloyd (not verified) says:
This is Great Chris, thankyou for your outstanding work. I am so excited to have found so much info all at once.

Lexmex (not verified) says:
amazing. i think urban farming like 99problems would do amazing things if it was developed correctly Bebo.com/99ProblemsDotOrg

dieting tips (not verified) says:
I have fifteen Living Walls mint for trade... Oh wait, wrong thread.

prkvie (not verified) says:
This is a good sign towards the future and technology is here today to get the first steps going. Today we have fish farms that leave natural populations of fish alone while supplying humans with the fish consumption that they need. Check out this high-tech fish farm off the coast of hawaii that's making some headlines:
http://www.americasheartland.org/episodes/episode_117/aqua_culture.htm

Addie Rose (not verified) says:
This is the coolest thing since sliced bread!

Gavin (not verified) says:
Man.. some cool looking wall gardens. I wonder how many of them actually exist

Roy (not verified) says:
I saw someone ask about roots. These buildings would probably use a combination of aeroponics and hydroponics to avoid the weight of all that soil. These growing methods are faster than soil anyhow.
This is the future of farming IMO. I just wish there was more thrift and less glitz in these designs. The 200 mill price tag on the Las Vegas sky farm is real disappointing. Whatever happened to simple design=best design?
rebok11 says:
Vertical farms - concept developing out of vertical gardens - still very alien and un-natural.
Some of those proposals could not be implemented until communities are educated in regards to hydroponics etc. Who will maintain these - better integration and potential scenario design must be realised before these can truly work. I understand these images provoke though, but I feel still need a lot more work.
Who is going to invest 1 billion into one building? (Image in India) Do we need to start to involve the big food chains in this idea- could Mac Donald’s get its food from a above the store??
Have these images/concepts really considered their cultural surrounding? Food typologies- they all seem very generic to me. Why not start to design more personal concepts which really consider connecting man to his food?
I appear again the idea- I am not I just want people to think about the infrastructure we need to set up before these designs can become a reality.
please visit
http://groundingverticalfarming.blogspot.com
and leave your comments
MArch student




Sara (not verified) says:
Ahh, love this post! Thank you! :)