Completed in the spring of 2008, the cool and green roof demonstration/research project of Ann Arbor, Mich.-based architecture and design firm A3C took place atop its UrbEn Retreat. The project was implemented with the assistance of Firestone Building Products and in collaboration with Prof. Moji Nawab of the University of Michigan’s Sustainable Design Research Lab. The planting of 2,500 plugs in the loose-laid portion of the green roof was completed in May 2008 with the assistance of a dozen local master gardeners.
The Subjects
The roof consists of three different types of membrane roofing. The south end and northwest corner of the roof are 60-mil black EPDM. The northeast corner of the roof is a specially coated TPO, and the center section of the roof is a green roof with a 60-mil white TPO roof membrane and a 45-mil slip sheet/root barrier. Four and a half inches of closed-cell polyurethane was installed on top of the wood decking with a top layer of a half-inch paperless gypsum product on the insulation. The combined R-value of the roof is R-30, which is 50 percent more than the current ASHRAE prescriptive requirement for the state of Michigan.While research studies on the thermal performance of cool roofs have been done for Minnesota and Maryland, we are not aware of any done in Southeast Michigan that take into consideration the local lake-effect weather, which results in only 2.5 days of clear sky per month during a typical winter. The 2007-2008 winter was colder and snowier than our typical winters, but it also had a few more clear-sky days. It was also our intent to study the differences between cool roofs, and between cool roofs and green roofs of varying depths during a full year.
Live Roof/Hortech provided a 4-inch pre-vegetated tray system, and Xero Flor provided a 2.5-inch mat system. We worked with Jorg Breuning of Green Roof Services in the design of the extensive and semi-intensive loose-laid systems. Atwell Hicks’ William Knighton assisted with plant selection.
Data Collection
A total of eighteen sensors were installed so each area could be monitored, and each area has a primary and backup sensor. Sensors are installed just under the membrane, just above the deck and just below the roof structure within the conditioned space. Data is collected at 4-minute intervals. This data is regularly downloaded and converted to spreadsheets to allow both numerical and graphical comparison. (See Figures 1 and 2.)Under the shallow green roof adjacent to the cool roof strips, the temperature went from 60 to 68 degrees - never adding a thermal load at all. It actually helped keep the building cool. Similar results were seen in spring and fall as well. The winter chart shows that the green roof did help keep the roof warmer than the cool roof. This is probably in part due to the snow, which accumulates on the roof and the green roof acts as a thermal mass between the snow and the roof membrane.